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+ <title>Letters From Rome on the Council</title>
+ <author><name reg="von Döllinger, Johann Joseph Ignaz">Johann Joseph Ignaz von Döllinger</name></author>
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+ <edition n="1">Edition 1</edition>
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+ <date>November 23, 2011</date>
+ <idno type="etext-no">38116</idno>
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+ <div rend="page-break-before: always">
+ <p rend="font-size: xx-large; text-align: center">Letters From Rome on the Council</p>
+ <p rend="font-size: x-large; text-align: center">By <q>Quirinus</q></p>
+ <p rend="font-size: x-large; text-align: center">(Johann Joseph Ignaz von Döllinger)</p>
+ <p rend="font-size: large; text-align: center">Reprinted from the <hi rend='italic'>Allgemeine Zeiting</hi>.</p>
+ <p rend="font-size: large; text-align: center">Authorized Translation.</p>
+ <p rend="text-align: center">Rivingtons</p>
+ <p rend="text-align: center">London, Oxford, and Cambridge</p>
+ <p rend="text-align: center">1870</p>
+ </div>
+ <div rend="page-break-before: always">
+ <head>Contents</head>
+ <divGen type="toc" />
+ </div>
+
+ </front>
+<body>
+
+<pb n='v'/><anchor id='Pgv'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Preface.</head>
+
+<p>
+These Letters of the Council originated in the following
+way. Three friends in Rome were in the habit
+of communicating to one another what they heard
+from persons intimately acquainted with the proceedings
+of the Council. Belonging as they did to different
+stations and different classes of life, and having already
+become familiar, before the opening of the Council,
+through long residence in Rome, with the state of
+things and with persons there, and being in free and
+daily intercourse with some members of the Council,
+they were very favourably situated for giving a true
+report as well of the proceedings as of the views of
+those who took part in it. Their letters were addressed
+to a friend in Germany, who added now and then
+historical explanations to elucidate the course of events,
+and then forwarded them to the <hi rend='italic'>Allgemeine Zeitung</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Much the authors of these Letters could only communicate,
+<pb n='vi'/><anchor id='Pgvi'/>
+because the Bishops themselves, from whose
+mouth or hand they obtained their materials, were
+desirous of securing publicity for them in this way,
+That there should be occasional inaccuracies of detail in
+matters of subordinate importance was inevitable in drawing
+up reports which had to be composed as the events
+occurred, and not seldom had only rumours or conjectures
+to rest upon. But on the whole we can safely
+affirm that no substantial error has crept in, and that
+these reports supply as faithful a portrait as can be
+given of this Council, so eventful in its bearings on the
+future history of the Catholic Church, and not only
+conscientiously exhibit its outward course, but in some
+degree unveil those more secret and hidden movements
+whereby the definition of the new dogma of infallibility
+was brought about. If it were necessary here to
+adduce testimonies for the truth of these reports, we
+might appeal to the actual sequence of events, which has
+so often and so clearly confirmed our predictions and
+our estimate of the persons concerned and their motives,
+as well as to the Letters and other works of the Bishops,
+whether published with or without their names.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This collection of Letters then is the best authority
+for the history of the Vatican Council. No later historian
+<pb n='vii'/><anchor id='Pgvii'/>
+of the Council will be able to dispense with them,
+and the Liberal Catholic Opposition, whose ecclesiastical
+conscience protests against the imposition of dogmas
+effected by all kinds of crooked arts and appliances of
+force, will find here the most serviceable weapons for
+combating the legitimacy of the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In order to preserve the original character of the
+Letters, as a chronicle accurately reflecting the opinions
+and feelings of the Bishops of the minority, they are
+published now in a complete collection without any
+change, with the exception of a few corrections here
+and there in a foot-note. Some articles from the
+<hi rend='italic'>Allgemeine Zeitung</hi> are prefixed to the Letters, which
+have an important bearing on the previous history of
+the Council;<note place='foot'>[It may be well to add, to preclude misconceptions, that both Letters
+and Articles are exclusively the work of Catholics.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> and an appendix is subjoined containing
+documents partly serving to throw a further light on
+the history of the Council and partly to corroborate our
+statements.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>September 1870.</hi>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='001'/><anchor id='Pg001'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Views of the Council. (Allgemeine Zeitung, May 20, 1869.)</head>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Antonelli is said on good authority
+to have replied very lately to the question of
+the ambassador of a Northern Government, that it
+is certainly intended to have the dogma of Papal Infallibility
+proclaimed at the ensuing Council; and,
+moreover, as this has long been the belief of all good
+Catholics, that there would be no difficulty about the
+definition. It by no means follows, if this report is
+correct, that the importance of the new principle of
+faith to be created is not well understood at Rome.
+The <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà Cattolica</hi> leaves no room for doubt that one
+of its principal effects is already distinctly kept in view,
+and that a further principle, which again must involve
+an indefinite series of consequences, is being deliberately
+aimed at.<note place='foot'>The weight to be attached to the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> on all questions connected
+with the Council may be gathered from the Brief of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> of Feb. 12,
+1866, printed in the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, Serie vi. vol. vi. pp. 7-15. The Pope declares
+that this journal, expressly intrusted with the defence of religion and with
+teaching and disseminating the authority and claims of the Roman See, is
+to be written and edited by a special staff to be named by the General of
+the Jesuits, who are to have a special house and revenues of their own.
+The previous censorship, as is known in Rome, is exercised with particular
+care, so that nothing appears without the approbation of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>.</note> In the number for April 3, it has
+<pb n='002'/><anchor id='Pg002'/>
+spoken with full approval, with reference to the approaching
+Council, of the famous Bull of Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>,
+<hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi>, doubly confirmed by Papal authority,
+and addressed as a supreme decision on faith to the
+whole ecclesiastical world, and treats it as self-evident
+that all the contents of the Bull, with other doctrinal
+decrees issued throughout the Church, will come
+into full force after the Council, and thenceforth form
+the basis of Catholic doctrine on the relations of
+Church and State. The maxims that will have to be
+adopted, as well by the learned as in popular instruction,
+when once Papal Infallibility has been defined,
+are these:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two powers, the temporal and spiritual, are in
+the hands of the Church, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi> the Pope, who permits the
+former to be administered by kings and others, but only
+under his guidance and during his good pleasure (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ad
+nutum et potentiam sacerdotis</foreign>). It belongs to the
+spiritual power, according to the Divine commission
+<pb n='003'/><anchor id='Pg003'/>
+and plenary jurisdiction bestowed on Peter, to appoint,
+and, if cause arise, to judge the temporal; and whoever
+opposes its regulations rebels against the ordinance
+of God.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a word, the absolute dominion of the Church over
+the State will next year come into force as a principle
+of Catholic faith, and become a factor to be reckoned
+with by every Commonwealth or State that has Catholic
+inhabitants; and by <q>Church</q> in this system must
+always be understood the Pope, and the Bishops who
+act under absolute control of the Pope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the moment therefore when Papal Infallibility
+is proclaimed by the Council, the relations of all Governments
+to the Church are fundamentally changed. The
+Roman See is brought into the same position towards
+other States which it now occupies towards Italy in regard
+to the provinces formerly belonging to the States of the
+Church. All States find themselves, strictly speaking,
+in an attitude of permanent revolt against their lawful
+and divinely ordained suzerain, the Pope. He indeed
+on his side can and will tolerate much which properly
+ought not to be&mdash;for it has long been recognised in Rome
+that right, even though divine, by no means implies
+the duty of always exercising it. In numberless cases
+<pb n='004'/><anchor id='Pg004'/>
+silence will be observed, or some such formula adopted
+as that of the Austrian Concordat, art. 14: <q>Temporum
+ratione habitâ Sua Sanctitas haud impedit,</q> etc. But
+that must only be understood <q>during good behaviour,</q>
+or so long as the times do not change or it seems
+expedient. In conscience every Catholic is bound to
+be guided, in the first instance, in political and social
+questions, by the directions or known will of his supreme
+lord and master the Pope, and of course, in the event
+of a conflict between his own Government and the
+Papal, to side with the latter. No Government therefore
+can hereafter count on the loyalty and obedience
+of its Catholic subjects, unless its measures and acts are
+such as to secure the sanction, or agreement of the
+Pope. As to non-Catholic Governments, moreover, the
+former declarations of Popes against heretical princes,
+which receive fresh life from the dogma of Infallibility,
+come into full force. If it is already a common complaint
+that in countries where the Government or the
+majority are Protestant, Catholics are treated with
+suspicion when they take any part in the service of
+the State, and are purposely excluded from the higher
+and more important posts, how will this be after the
+Council?
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='005'/><anchor id='Pg005'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>The Future Council. (Allg. Zeit., June 11, 1869.)</head>
+
+<p>
+We have received the following interesting information
+from a trustworthy person, who is returned to Germany
+after a long sojourn in Rome, where he was in a
+position, among other things, to get to know the projects
+for the Council. The relations of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> to the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>
+may be fully understood from the fact&mdash;attested by the
+officials of the Chancery&mdash;that the editors are regularly
+admitted to an audience with the Holy Father, like
+the prime minister, usually once a week, never less
+often than every fortnight. At these audiences the
+manuscripts prepared for the next number are laid before
+the Pope, who reads them, and, according to his interest
+in the contents, comments on them or returns them
+unaltered to the Chancery. The ideas of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>
+are therefore not only not unknown to the Pope, but
+are published with his express and personal approval.
+The chosen model of Pius IX. is Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi>, and his
+favourite notion is to discharge that <foreign rend='italic'>rôle</foreign> in the present
+Church which Gregory did in the middle ages. He is
+therefore thoroughly given up to theocratic tendencies
+in the contest against the modern State, and the attacks
+<pb n='006'/><anchor id='Pg006'/>
+of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> upon it and the whole system of modern
+civilisation express his innermost thoughts. Even the
+General of the Jesuits is said often to be uneasy about
+the language used by members of his Order in their
+journal, and unable to avoid the apprehension that it
+may seriously prejudice the Order hereafter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the Chancery, where Antonelli's confidant Mgr.
+Marini revises the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, it very seldom happens that
+any alterations are made in the articles, partly because
+the Cardinal Secretary of State would at no price get
+into bad odour with the Jesuits. Only the record of
+contemporary events (<hi rend='italic'>Cronaca Contemporanea</hi>) is submitted
+<foreign rend='italic'>pro formâ</foreign> to the Dominican Spada, the Master
+of the Palace, for inspection. But although there can
+be no shadow of doubt that in all its utterances about
+the approaching Council the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, is simply the organ
+of the Holy Father himself, Antonelli does not cease to
+give the most reassuring answers to questions addressed
+to him on the subject by the various diplomatic agents.
+Rome, he assures them, will not take the initiative in
+making either the propositions of the Syllabus or Papal
+Infallibility into dogmas. Many representatives of
+foreign Governments have been deceived by these declarations,
+and have written home in that sense, the
+<pb n='007'/><anchor id='Pg007'/>
+immediate consequence of which was seen in the
+reception accorded in some Courts to the despatch of
+the Bavarian Government. But they will not allow at
+Rome that they mean themselves to give the first
+impulse for these solemn dogmatic decisions. That
+only proves the confidence felt in the Vatican that a
+considerable number of the Bishops will come forward
+to demand it. It is a secret already pretty well published
+in Rome, how the play is to be put on the stage,
+and who is to be the protagonist. Nor does any one
+there venture seriously to deny the fact that a version
+of the Syllabus, composed by Father Schrader, at the
+wish of the Pope himself, changing its negative theses
+into positive, is already drawn up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Archbishop Manning and Cardinal Reisach are the
+leading persons in all these designs. Reisach,<note place='foot'>[Cardinal Reisach was absent at the opening of the Council, and died
+soon afterwards, Dec. 26, 1869, in Savoy.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> who is
+accounted in Rome a man of eminent learning and
+wisdom, and who always manifests the most unbounded
+devotion to the Pope, takes an unfavourable view of
+German affairs. It was through him that Dr. Mast,
+well known through what occurred at Rottenburg, was
+placed on two of the preparatory Commissions (<hi rend='italic'>Politico-Ecclesiastica</hi>
+<pb n='008'/><anchor id='Pg008'/>
+and <hi rend='italic'>De Disciplinâ Ecclesiæ</hi>) as consultor.
+So again, he has sought out Moufang of
+Mayence and Molitor of Spires, for his own Congregation,
+because he presumes them to be like-minded
+with himself. The general rule in selecting persons
+for the preliminary work has been to consider their
+devotion to the cause, not their scientific capabilities.
+First among them, in the directing Congregation of
+Cardinals, must be named Bilio, who never loses an
+opportunity in conversation of eloquently extolling
+Papal Infallibility. To the same class belongs Panebianco,
+a zealous friend of the extremest claims of the
+Bourbons. Neither of them is known for learned
+labours of any note, as neither are Barnabo and the
+aged Patrizzi, who is named President of this Congregation
+merely on account of his name and age. Among
+the domestic consultors of the Commission on dogma,
+known in literature, and as its very soul, sits the Jesuit
+Perrone, who is become indispensable to the Pope; then
+comes Spada, the Dominican, Master of the Palace, who
+gained his theological reputation by a controversial
+treatise in defence of eternal punishment; Cardoni,
+who exhibited his strong views in a work advocating
+the obligation of religious when named to bishoprics
+<pb n='009'/><anchor id='Pg009'/>
+still to live according to the rules of their Order; and
+finally, Bartolini, who has vindicated the identity of
+the Holy House of Loretto with the house of the Blessed
+Virgin at Nazareth&mdash;all simply men of the most rigid
+type. Among those employed in these preliminary
+labours, Professor Biondo, of St. Apollinare, excels all
+the rest, if in nothing else, in his conviction that true
+devotion to the Church can only be found in Italy.
+We may take as a significant illustration of the method
+of choosing foreign consultors, the appointment of Mgr.
+Talbot for England, who, when appointed, was out of
+his mind, and has now been for four months in a
+lunatic asylum. Among the French who are invited
+the Abbé Freppel appears to be the most moderate.
+But even in Rome there are many clergymen, and even
+Cardinals, who do not conceal their opinion that with
+such designs the Council will be an embarrassment for
+Rome, and a danger for the Church. But nothing of
+this comes to the ear of the supreme authority, nor
+would information of it directly conveyed to the
+Pope be likely to effect any change. Even the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+measures the sentiment of the Catholic world by the
+homage paid to the Pope, and therefore the solemnity
+can only encourage them in their designs about the
+<pb n='010'/><anchor id='Pg010'/>
+Council. It is sometimes feared that the French
+Bishops may give trouble; any opposition on the part
+of secular governments is not taken into account, for
+the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> has completely broken with the modern State,
+and has systematically ignored it both in the project
+and the proclamation of the Council, while according
+to the precedent of nearly all former Œcumenical
+Synods, an understanding should have been come to
+with the Catholic States as to the time and place of
+holding it, and the subjects to be discussed. The
+separation of Church and State in this last procedure
+is the act of Rome, although the opposite theory is
+sanctioned in the Syllabus. Anything like a literary
+and scientific opposition, or a movement among the
+laity, such as has here and there begun to show itself,
+is regarded in the Vatican as a mere tempest in
+a tea-cup.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Prince Hohenlohe and the Council. (Allg. Zeit., June 20 and 21, 1869.)</head>
+
+<p>
+In former times, the assembling of an Œcumenical
+Council was caused by a general sense throughout the
+Catholic world of some religious need, whether the definition
+of an article of faith or the abolition of grave evils
+<pb n='011'/><anchor id='Pg011'/>
+and abuses&mdash;in short, a reformation&mdash;was felt to be
+necessary. It was universally known what questions the
+Council was to treat of. The sovereigns communicated,
+for this end, with the heads of the Church and the
+Pope, and brought forward their own wishes and requirements,
+as at the last Œcumenical Council of
+Trent, which had at least to be taken into consideration.
+But how entirely different is this Council under
+Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>! Already, in 1854, an episcopal assembly, at
+Rome, raised to the dignity of a dogma the thesis of a
+theological school of the middle ages, combated even by
+Thomas Aquinas, but which happens to have become a
+favourite opinion of the Pope, although no ground had
+been discovered for this new article of faith in any want
+of the religious life which the Church has to cultivate.
+And this was done against the judgment of a considerable
+number of the prelates who were consulted, without
+any basis for the doctrine being able to be found in
+Scripture and Tradition, by the acclamations of the
+assembled bishops&mdash;after a fashion, that is, in which
+no dogma had ever been defined before. The Abbé
+Laborde, who craved permission to lay his objections
+before the assembly, received for answer his banishment
+from Rome, and the name of another priest was
+<pb n='012'/><anchor id='Pg012'/>
+subscribed to the Bull proclaiming the dogma without
+his knowledge or consent, so that he found himself
+compelled to protest publicly against it. In view of
+these facts, and under the just anticipation that at the
+approaching Council the dominant party in Rome will be
+equally tyrannical in their treatment of dissentients,&mdash;it
+is already reported that three members of the present Commission,
+who are opposed to Jesuit tendencies and practices,
+have been suffered to retire&mdash;several distinguished
+heads of the Church have renounced the idea of delivering
+their testimony there. And how is this Council
+the outcome of any urgent requirements of the Church's
+life, and does Catholic Christendom know what end
+it is designed to serve, and what is to be expected of it?
+Nothing of the sort. The necessity of the Council, if it
+will not put its hand to a reformation of the Church,
+in accordance with the needs of modern civilisation, is
+not everywhere understood by the clergy themselves.
+Only this winter wishes were loudly expressed by some of
+them that its assembling might be dispensed with, considering
+the position of the Church in Austria and Spain;
+but in the Holy Father's state of exaltation on the subject
+these wishes could have no effect. Then again,&mdash;what
+is perhaps without precedent in all Church history&mdash;the
+<pb n='013'/><anchor id='Pg013'/>
+the matters to be treated of in the Council have been
+carefully kept secret; the Bull of Indiction confines
+itself to vague generalities, and the theologians employed
+in the preliminary labours were bound to silence
+by the oath of the Holy Office,&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the Inquisition&mdash;imposed
+under pain of excommunication to be incurred
+<hi rend='italic'>ipso facto</hi>. It seems not to be necessary, therefore, at
+least for the present, that Christendom should have
+even any inkling of the doctrines on the acceptance or
+rejection of which salvation or damnation is to be made
+dependent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is not the satisfaction of real religious needs that
+is contemplated&mdash;there would be no need to shun publicity
+in that case&mdash;but chartering dogmas which have
+no root in the common convictions of the Catholic
+world. Leibnitz used to call even the Council of Trent
+a <q>concile de contrabande;</q> the way in which this
+last Council is to be brought on the stage would make
+the designation for the first time fully applicable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If these circumstances alone are enough to make
+Governments that have Catholic subjects suspicious of
+the designs of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, there are also further proofs
+that their designs are not confined to strictly ecclesiastical
+affairs, but involve direct encroachment on the life
+<pb n='014'/><anchor id='Pg014'/>
+of the modern State. Not to dwell here on the too open-hearted
+confidences of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, which, although published
+with the approval of the Holy Father himself,
+have been characterized by him as an <q>imprudenza,</q><note place='foot'>[See Introduction to The Pope and the Council, pp. 1-4.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+we will pass to other facts which sufficiently indicate
+the projected decrees of the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the inquiries of ambassadors about the reasons for
+summoning a General Council, Antonelli could only
+reply by referring to the great revolution and fundamental
+change in civil and political relations. It may
+be inferred from this declaration that the Council is
+intended to discharge a political office also, and in what
+sense, Rome has told us in the Syllabus and the condemnation
+of the Austrian Constitution. For this
+object an ecclesiastico-political consulting committee
+has been formed, subordinate to the Commission intrusted
+with the supreme control of the Council, with
+Cardinal Reisach at its head, and whose Italian members
+are as conspicuous for their want of scientific culture as
+for their opposition to any concession to the requirements
+of the age, and their hostility to all foreign
+countries, and especially to the non-Roman portions of
+Italy. The Syllabus will be put into shape in its
+<pb n='015'/><anchor id='Pg015'/>
+affirmative form by this Section, in order thus to be submitted
+for sanction to the Council. One of its members
+lately expressed himself in the following terms, with
+the applause of his colleagues and of the Holy Father
+himself:&mdash;<q>The Syllabus is good, but raw meat, and
+must be carefully dressed to make it palatable.</q> This
+skilful dressing, which is to make it everywhere acceptable,
+it is hoped to effect by publishing the propositions
+in the form of exhortations, instead of commands, which,
+however, will come to the same thing, as the exhortations
+emanate from the head of the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is with good reason that Prince Hohenlohe, in his
+despatch, expresses the fear that the Council, according
+to the programme of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, will publish decrees on
+political rather than ecclesiastical questions, and he
+rightly states that the projected dogma of Papal Infallibility
+is also an eminently political question. For
+when once that is defined, the mediæval pretension of
+the Pope to dominion over kings and nations, even in
+secular matters, which has never been abandoned, is
+thereby also raised to the rank of an article of divine
+faith. Thiers lately made the remarkable observation
+that the temporal power alone holds the Pope in
+check;&mdash;a monk, who was Pope, would think himself
+<pb n='016'/><anchor id='Pg016'/>
+omnipotent. Certainly, without the temporal
+power, the maintenance of which depends on the goodwill
+of the French Government, and the administration
+of which keeps the Pope within a political area, he
+would give freer rein, when it was possible, to his views
+of the corruption of the modern State. Once seat a
+monk on the Papal throne, as many have already sat
+there, unacquainted with the actual world, and in heart
+alienated from it, and arm him with the prerogative of
+infallibility,&mdash;his decrees in the present condition of
+society are sure to evoke the most deplorable conflicts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ultramontane press in Germany, which is itself
+beginning to find the decisions sketched out by the
+<hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> intolerable, now adopts the tactics of denying
+the official character of the Jesuit journal, and clings to
+the straw of hope that neither Papal Infallibility nor
+the Syllabus will be made dogmas. But it is no secret
+in Rome that those alarming communications of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> were letters written by French Jesuits, prepared
+and published with the sanction of the Holy Father
+himself, and cannot therefore be treated as mere chance
+contributions of private correspondents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For several years past the Court of Rome, with the
+aid of its indefatigable allies the Jesuits, has been preparing
+<pb n='017'/><anchor id='Pg017'/>
+the way for securing beforehand the votes of the
+Bishops on Papal Infallibility. Thus some years ago
+the Bishops of different countries received, quite unexpectedly,
+an urgent admonition from Rome to hold
+Provincial Synods, and frame decrees at them. These
+decrees had to be sent to Rome, to the Congregation exclusively
+charged with the revision of such ordinances,
+and were then returned, after correction and enlargement
+by the Cardinals and Committees of the Congregation.
+When they came to be printed, it was found that all
+these Synods had shown a wonderful unanimity in adopting
+Papal Infallibility as a self-evident principle into
+their exposition of universally known Catholic doctrine.
+The Jesuit organs have not failed to point triumphantly
+to these decisions of so many Bishops and Synods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a fact that Antonelli publicly declared there
+could be no difficulty about the promulgation of Papal
+Infallibility, because it was a doctrine already held by
+all good Catholics. And this is the watchword of the
+whole ultramontane party at Rome. It is also a fact
+that the question was brought before the directing Commission
+in order to be put into shape, and then submitted
+for confirmation to the Council. And although it is
+certain that the discussion of it by the Commission is
+<pb n='018'/><anchor id='Pg018'/>
+finished, the decision will be carefully kept secret for
+a time, because as yet courage fails them for a straightforward
+course of procedure, and they hope to gain
+their end by a sort of <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>coup d'état</foreign>, viz., carrying the
+dogma by spontaneous acclamation, to be evoked by a
+foreign prelate.<note place='foot'>[Cf. <hi rend='italic'>The Pope and the Council</hi>, p. 6.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> And thus Governments will be deprived
+of the opportunity of gaining any influence over
+the decisions of the Council, and protecting themselves
+against threatening eventualities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well-informed persons, who do not deny the intention
+of making Infallibility into a dogma, think that
+some innocuous formula will at last be discovered, such
+as prefixing a <q>quasi</q> to <q>infallibilis,</q> so that all the
+trouble expended in gratifying this darling wish of
+Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix</hi>. will be almost labour lost. But so long as the
+decision rests with the Jesuits, who have an overwhelming
+majority in the preparatory Congregation, there is
+no ground for this hope. They foresee the possibility of
+being again driven from the helm a few days after the
+death of the Pope, and therefore press for an unqualified
+definition, that they may make capital out of the infallible
+Pope for conquering a new position of influence for
+themselves in civilized Catholic countries. And if they
+<pb n='019'/><anchor id='Pg019'/>
+could not reckon without some regard to other factors
+also, still their calculations had a good prospect of
+success, for Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix</hi>. is completely in the hands of the
+Jesuits, especially of Father Piccirillo, the chief person
+on the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> staff, who will act as <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>spiritus rector</foreign> of
+the Council. The Pope is seldom left alone, lest he
+should fall under the influence of others who judge
+more correctly of the situation of the modern world and
+the real wants of the Catholic Church; he lives in an
+artificial atmosphere of homage poured forth by the
+ultramontane journals. He is so possessed with a sense
+of his own power that he believes he ought not to
+regard or fear any possible opposition of the French
+Government to the decisions of the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile there are growing signs that at least a
+portion of the French episcopate are not willing to
+degrade themselves to the humiliating <foreign rend='italic'>rôle</foreign> of mere
+acclaimers to the propositions of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. In two
+articles of the <hi rend='italic'>Français</hi> (for March 18 and 19) Dupanloup
+has already decisively disclaimed sympathy with
+the tendencies and insinuations loudly expressed in the
+notorious correspondence of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>. He gives a
+specimen of the hopes and wishes about the Council
+intimated by the French Bishops in their pastorals,
+<pb n='020'/><anchor id='Pg020'/>
+where he shows that they are all far from expecting
+it to assail political and social liberty and freedom of
+conscience, to condemn modern civilisation and widen
+the breach between the Catholic Church and other
+Christian bodies, by proclaiming new dogmas; but, on
+the contrary, that they look for a reformation of Church
+discipline adapted to the age, and a work of general
+reconciliation with the great ideas of cultivation, freedom,
+and the common weal. These declarations of the
+French episcopate excited great surprise and deep disgust
+at Rome, without, however, to all appearance,
+having disturbed the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> in their plans, as they know
+from the statistics that they can count on an imposing
+majority in the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seats are prepared for 850 Bishops at the Council,
+but the question whether Bishops <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign> are to
+have decisive votes is not yet decided. Since, however,
+their admission will not materially affect the relative
+position of the two parties, they may be left out of the
+account. To these voting members of the Council must
+be added 57 Cardinals, and the number might be raised
+before its opening to 72, by the bestowal of the 15 hats
+vacant at present. There are thus about 920 decisive
+votes, including 40 Italian Cardinals, 294 Italian
+<pb n='021'/><anchor id='Pg021'/>
+Bishops, 66 Spanish, 22 Portuguese, 90 French,&mdash;in all
+512 prelates of the Romance race in Europe, to whom
+must be added 77 Brazilian, Mexican, and South American
+Bishops, raising the whole Romance representation
+to 600 votes. From this number about 60 must be
+deducted for vacant Italian Sees, and some 140 who
+may presumably be unable to attend. And so about
+400 are left, whose votes, with the exception of a number
+of French Bishops, are counted upon by the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>.
+The Court also reckons on the votes of 48 from England
+and Ireland, 52 from North America, 20 from Greece
+and Turkey, 6 from Belgium, 5 from Holland, and 16
+from Canada. If the Polish and Russian Bishops are
+allowed to come, they too will swell the majority; and
+so, it is believed, will the Armenian and Uniate Bishops
+in Austria, Russia, and Bulgaria, numbering about 40.
+Of the 65 German and Austrian Bishops scarcely half
+will side with the Opposition. And so, if matters are
+to be settled by majorities, the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> is fully assured
+of its victory. Cardinal Antonelli counts on from 500
+to 600 votes of those actually present.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under these circumstances the Governments of
+countries with Catholic populations should be urgently
+pressed to devote their serious attention to what is
+<pb n='022'/><anchor id='Pg022'/>
+already going on in Rome, and not to let themselves be
+taken by surprise by the decrees of the Council, which,
+when once promulgated, will place their subjects in a
+painful dilemma between their duties towards the State
+and their obedience to the Church; will everywhere
+create disquiet and conflicts; and must, above all, involve
+their Bishops in contradictions with the Constitutions
+they have sworn to observe. In the present
+difficulties of the general political and social situation
+in Europe, a conflict in the highest degree fatal might
+ensue with the Church, whose mission of culture is not
+yet diminished even for the time, and whose co-operation
+for its own purposes the State cannot dispense
+with. In this contest the Church cannot conquer,
+because the spirit of the age is against her; but the
+very crash of so mighty an edifice would cover and
+destroy with its ruins the institutions of the State
+itself, perplex consciences, and entail universal mischief
+by for the first time fully confirming the spirit
+of absolute negation of the ethical and ideal conception
+of life. The proceedings of Prince Hohenlohe
+may have sprung from this statesmanlike consideration;
+they are inspired by a friendly spirit towards the Church
+herself, and are of a thoroughly loyal character. He
+<pb n='023'/><anchor id='Pg023'/>
+wishes the Governments openly to communicate with
+their Bishops, in order to point out to them the deplorable
+consequences which must follow from so premeditated
+and systematic a revolution of the existing relations
+between Church and State, and also, while there is still
+time, to take precautions against the event of conciliar decrees
+encroaching on the political domain. He challenges
+the learned corporations of the State most directly competent,
+to give their opinion publicly as to the practical
+results involved in making the Syllabus and Papal
+Infallibility into dogmas. This proceeding is far from
+being premature, for it is the business of a statesman
+not only to legislate in view of accomplished facts, but
+to provide for menacing dangers, nor will his conduct
+be blamed by any true friend of Church and State, whose
+faculty of judgment is not utterly blinded by hatred.
+The repressive measures which Governments would be
+compelled to employ after the promulgation of the contemplated
+dogmas would not be at all in the interest of
+the Church. Suppose, for instance, freedom of conscience,
+already condemned in the Syllabus, were anathematized
+by the Council, and the doctrine of religious
+compulsion sanctioned, the Bavarian Bishops who had
+assented to this decree, or wished to obey it, would
+<pb n='024'/><anchor id='Pg024'/>
+have broken their oath to the Constitution, the Constitution
+which guarantees freedom of conscience would
+be under the ban of Rome, and the Government would
+have to answer by publishing the Concordat.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>The Council. (Allg. Zeit., Aug. 19, 1869.)</head>
+
+<p>
+If the present situation in regard to the Council is
+considered, the triumph of the Jesuit ultramontane
+party there appears highly probable. The demonstration
+of the Rhenish Catholics has as yet assumed no larger
+dimensions, and will evidently gain nothing by the
+projected Catholic meeting at Düsseldorf; for not only
+is red-hot ultramontanism a decisive obstacle, but the
+widely growing and deepening religious indifference
+hinders men from taking any part in movements
+based on a spirit of loyalty to the Church. In Rome,
+accordingly, little notice is taken of the movement, and
+satisfaction is felt at the prospect of expelling this
+mischievous liberal element from the Church, because
+then it is hoped the kernel which remains true may be
+more boldly dealt with. Our German ultramontane
+press, which lost no time in making a bitter and contemptuous
+<pb n='025'/><anchor id='Pg025'/>
+attack on the address of the Rhenish Catholics,
+is therein only the exponent of the mind of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>.
+Meanwhile the German Bishops are preparing themselves
+to commit an act of doctrinal and ecclesiastical
+suicide, by renouncing for ever their long obscured but
+not as yet surrendered rank and authority as supreme
+judges of faith.<note place='foot'>These fears, as is well known, were not realized at Fulda.</note> Two of them, Bishops Ketteler of
+Mayence and Fessler of St. Pölten, have already pronounced
+in separate works for the infallibility of the
+Pope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The diplomatic action of Prince Hohenlohe in regard
+to the Council has indeed created for the time a sensation,
+which still continues among the States interested
+in the matter, and which eventually culminated in the desire
+to obtain further information about the propositions
+to be submitted for the acceptance of the assembled
+Bishops, but even the representative of France has
+been baffled by the arts of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. When, in June,
+M. Banneville put the decisive question whether they
+were not prepared to deny the alarming rumours as
+to the propositions to be laid before the Council, and to
+take immediate steps for facilitating the representation
+of Catholic States in the Council through ambassadors
+<pb n='026'/><anchor id='Pg026'/>
+of their own, Antonelli replied that he had no knowledge
+of what was going on in the Commissions, but as
+to the second point, the Church in her present changed
+relations with Catholic States, which sometimes persecute
+her and sometimes put her on an equality with
+other religious bodies, could not take the initiative.
+M. Banneville, who had simply spoken of the presence
+of an ambassador at the Council, but had said nothing of
+his rights, stated that this conversation had <q>profoundly
+humiliated him.</q> Thenceforth the Court of Rome was
+the more confirmed in its resolve to keep out diplomatists
+from the Council. To an indirect question as
+to the admission of an ambassador from non-Catholic
+States, which have a large Catholic population, an
+instant negative was returned. The quarrel of the
+Austrian Government with the Bishop of Linz has
+given a further impulse in the same direction, for then
+Antonelli began to declare more openly that it was
+indeed possible, but not likely, that any ambassadors
+would be admitted, till now at last he makes no secret
+of its being out of the question for Rome, under existing
+circumstances, to think of allowing Governments to be
+represented. It would not be feasible, he opines, to
+admit France alone, and what other Catholic States are
+<pb n='027'/><anchor id='Pg027'/>
+there that have not already disqualified themselves for
+taking part in the Council? Thus by degrees France
+too is gently thrust aside with her inquiries and demands,
+and the only question is whether Napoleon's
+Government will be content with this. Unless the
+clerical party in France itself causes the Emperor to
+assume an attitude of opposition to the Jesuit ultramontane
+programme of the Council, there is not much
+to be expected from him, since in view of the
+internal difficulties his Government at present has to
+contend with, he is obliged to take that party into
+account as an important factor in his calculations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Jesuits work assiduously in France, as well as
+Germany, to form a propaganda for the projected dogmas,
+and to familiarize men's minds with the idea that
+absolute certainty and inerrancy are only to be found
+with one man, viz., the Pope. Bouix in Paris, and
+Christophe at Lyons, have, with the <hi rend='italic'>Monde</hi>, and <hi rend='italic'>Univers,</hi>
+already most urgently inculcated on the Bishops what
+<q>good Catholics</q> expect of them in regard to the acclamation.
+But, with the exception of the Bishop of
+Nîmes, none of them have openly adhered to the
+Jesuit programme of the Council; on the contrary, the
+attitude of the French episcopate is perhaps at this
+<pb n='028'/><anchor id='Pg028'/>
+hour the only black speck on the horizon of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>.
+And in fact with them rests the decision in the present
+ecclesiastical crisis. To the French episcopate it belongs
+to show that they still preserve the great traditions of internal
+freedom in the Church, newly brought to light since
+the mediæval reforming Councils by French theologians,
+and thenceforth always conspicuously represented
+among them, and that they are filled with the spirit of
+Bossuet, who did not confound loyalty to the Church
+with blind devotion to unfounded claims of the Pope,
+but understood it to mean, above all things, loyalty to
+the ancient spirit and original institution of the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there are good grounds for hoping that at least
+a majority of the French Bishops will constitute a free-spoken
+opposition at the Council; the two French
+theologians Freppel and Trullet, as well as Cardinal
+Bonnechose, are said to have exercised a most powerful
+influence in this direction.<note place='foot'>The Cardinal's subsequent attitude has not justified this hope. Freppel
+too, as Bishop-designate of Anjou, has now declared himself for the
+infallibilists.</note> The latter openly complains
+that words of moderation are not listened to in Rome,
+and that, up to this time, giving any definite declarations
+of a reassuring nature has been avoided. He is understood
+to have said plainly that the great majority of the
+<pb n='029'/><anchor id='Pg029'/>
+French episcopate wished to keep peace with the State,
+and would lend no hand to the sanctioning of extreme
+tendencies. It is even rumoured that a collective remonstrance
+of the French Bishops on the notions prevalent
+at Rome is already contemplated, but has not yet been
+able to be carried out on account of some hesitation
+about the mode of action. Much may be hoped from
+Dupanloup's attitude at the Council; in him freedom
+of discussion and voting is sure to find a representative
+equally bold and eloquent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But even the opposition of the French Bishops will
+produce no results, if the decisions of the Council are
+to depend on majorities, for there can be no doubt that
+Rome may safely count on the great majority upholding
+her designs. We should have a repetition of what occurred
+in the Doctrinal Commission, when the question of
+Infallibility came before it, and a Monsignore and titular
+Bishop, residing in Rome, produced a memorial intended
+to prove that this high prerogative of the Pope had been
+the abiding faith of the Church all along, and arguing
+from this belief for the opportuneness of promulgating
+the new dogma, on the ground especially, among others,
+that at no period had the Bishops been so devoted to the
+Holy See as now. It is natural to expect of men so submissive,
+<pb n='030'/><anchor id='Pg030'/>
+and so ready to follow every hint of the Papal
+will, that they should joyfully seize the occasion for
+offering this grand homage also to the Pope. This was
+so conclusive to the Committee that they all decided
+at once, without any discussion, for the promulgation of
+the new dogma. Only one of the two German theologians,
+Alzog of Freiburg, opposed it; Schwetz of Vienna,
+on the other hand, fully agreed. For Rome, therefore, the
+question is settled, and whoever is otherwise minded at
+once forfeits his character for Catholic orthodoxy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor is there any more doubt about making the
+Syllabus dogmatic, for Roman prelates, who wish to
+have the character of being very enlightened, openly
+affirm that the propositions contained in it might
+already be regarded as dogmas. And it is stated on the
+best authority, even by high dignitaries themselves, that
+the whole of the seventeen questions laid before the
+assembled episcopate by Cardinal Caterini at the time
+of the Centenary, are to come before the Council for
+discussion, on the basis of the opinions then transmitted
+by the Bishops to Rome. And as a considerable number
+of these questions concern the relations of Church and
+State&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, civil marriage, the relations of Bishops to
+the civil power, etc.,&mdash;it is clear enough what credit is
+<pb n='031'/><anchor id='Pg031'/>
+to be given to the assurances that the Council will
+not deal with any matter that could involve the Church
+in conflict with the State. It was found almost necessary,
+after public opinion had been alarmed by the
+<hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, to change the method of procedure. It
+was either expressly denied that the Council would
+deal with such matters as the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> had indicated,
+or it was said that even in Rome what subjects
+would come on for discussion and decision was
+unknown, since the intentions of the Bishops, at present
+scattered over all parts of the world, were not
+known, and on the general ground that the decisions of
+a Council acting under Divine guidance cannot be conjectured
+beforehand. As if the recent Provincial
+Synods, and the answers of the Bishops to the questions
+laid before them by Caterini, had not supplied
+Rome with a perfectly clear understanding of their
+views! As if it was not notorious that the work the
+Council was desired to accomplish had been already
+cut out for it in detail in the preparatory Congregations!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, at length, if we may trust a communication
+dated from Rome in the <hi rend='italic'>Donau Zeitung</hi>, the authorities
+seem inclined to abandon this system of playing at hide-and-seek
+with the public, and find it necessary, in some
+<pb n='032'/><anchor id='Pg032'/>
+measure at least, to lift the mask from their designs
+for the Council. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> himself is said no longer to
+make any secret of his intention to bring forward the
+question of Infallibility; but he declares that the
+Council will be left entirely free in discussing and
+deciding on it, and that it will only be raised to a
+dogma if a large majority pronounce for it. And with
+this agrees a recent statement of Antonelli, made in
+the teeth of his earlier declarations, that the Holy
+Father will meet the Council with positive proposals of
+his own, and that no doubt can be allowed as to the
+acceptance of his authority. This last clause shows
+what is meant in Rome by the so-called freedom to be
+enjoyed by the Council. If then that freedom is all
+of a sudden pointedly dwelt on, this is only one of
+the devices of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> for hoodwinking public opinion,
+just as eminent theologians of liberal tendencies
+were summoned to the previous Commissions, which
+were none the less occupied with duties of a precisely
+opposite kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may be conceived that loyal but far-sighted
+Catholics, like Montalembert, are profoundly afflicted
+at the course things are taking in questions of decisive
+interest for the authority and the whole future of the
+<pb n='033'/><anchor id='Pg033'/>
+Church, The religious indifference of the age will prevent
+any open schism in the Catholic Church, but the
+internal apostasy will be all the more extensive. All
+modern culture will separate itself in spirit from the
+Church, which has nothing but anathemas for the
+development of the human mind. And when an Œcumenical
+Council, which is the highest teaching authority
+in the Church, degenerates into the instrument of
+an extreme party, and sanctions doctrines in glaring
+contradiction to the teaching and history of the Church,
+the very foundation on which the confidence of faith
+has hitherto reposed is undermined and destroyed.
+And thus the ever growing rejection of Christianity
+will be powerfully strengthened, so that even believing
+Protestants watch with sorrow an Œcumenical Council
+preparing to compromise its authority. Very different,
+of course, is the view of men like Manning and Ward,
+who fancy the definition of Papal Infallibility will be a
+short and easy way for restoring their countrymen to
+the bosom of the Catholic Church. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix</hi>. himself
+is indeed convinced that he is only building up the
+Church and crowning her work in placing the dogma
+of Infallibility on it as a cupola.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It has been thought fit by statesmen to exercise no
+<pb n='034'/><anchor id='Pg034'/>
+constraint on the designs of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, but to await its
+decisions, and afterwards, if they should be menacing
+to political interests, to employ measures of repression.
+This conduct cannot, of course, accord with the mind of
+believing Catholics who are not ultramontanes, as it
+leaves their obligations towards those articles of faith
+untouched, and cannot annul the definitions for their
+consciences. But the question arises, whether from a
+political point of view this expedient must not be pronounced
+a mistake. Consider the dangerous influence
+conciliar decrees provoking hostility against the modern
+State and its civilisation may exert on those numerous
+classes, which are always in the hands of the clergy,
+and form an important factor in the life of the State.
+Consider, again, what is to be expected in this respect
+of a clergy who, as everything serves to indicate, will
+hereafter more than ever before be alienated from all
+modern culture, on the express ground of the decrees
+of the approaching Council, educated in a spirit of
+hostility to the State, and made into a mere passive
+instrument of Rome. It is difficult to exaggerate the
+conflicts between Church and State that may be expected
+to follow.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='035'/><anchor id='Pg035'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>The Fulda Pastoral. (Allg. Zeit., Sept. 25, 1869.)</head>
+
+<p>
+The Pastoral which the Bishops assembled at Fulda
+ordered to be read in all the Churches under their
+jurisdiction is an important document. It reflects the
+excited and abnormal state of feeling prevalent among
+Catholics, since the Jesuits, and some Prelates allied
+with them, have announced the design of using the
+Council for proclaiming new dogmas, especially that of
+Papal Infallibility. <q>Even among loyal and zealous
+members of the Church,</q> say the Bishops, <q>anxieties
+calculated to weaken confidence are being excited.</q>
+The object and main substance of their Pastoral is
+directed to allaying those anxieties, and assuring German
+Catholics that their Bishops at least will not
+assent to the projected dogmas. They have solemnly
+pledged their word, before the whole nation, that they
+will avouch at the Council the three following principles&mdash;<emph>first</emph>,
+<q>That the Council can establish no new
+dogmas, or any others than are written by faith and
+conscience on all your (German Catholics') hearts;</q>
+<emph>secondly</emph>, <q>That a General Council never will or can
+proclaim a new doctrine not contained in Holy Scripture
+<pb n='036'/><anchor id='Pg036'/>
+or Apostolic Tradition;</q> <emph>thirdly</emph>, That only <q>the
+old and original truth will be set in clearer light.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This indeed is very re-assuring. The Jesuits have
+proclaimed that the bodily Assumption of the Holy
+Virgin and the Infallibility of the Pope are to be made
+dogmas at the Council. The Bishops are aware that
+the two Jesuit organs, the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, and <hi rend='italic'>Rheinischen
+Stimmen</hi>, from the Monastery of Laach, as well as the
+Archbishop of Mechlin (Deschamps), and Bishop Plantier
+of Nîmes, have put forward the erection of Papal
+Infallibility into a dogma of the Universal Church.
+Moreover, the assembly at Fulda knew well enough
+that the preliminary materials for this definition were
+already prepared at Rome. Now nobody will seriously
+maintain that these two opinions are written
+by faith and conscience on the heart of every Catholic,
+or are doctrines contained in Scripture and Tradition,
+and ancient and original truths. The Pastoral therefore
+contains a promise, worded with all the distinctness
+that could be desired, that, so far as it depends on
+the votes of the German Bishops, the yoke of the new
+articles of faith shall not be laid on the German
+nation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The German Bishops cannot of course pledge themselves
+beforehand for the whole Council, for they will
+<pb n='037'/><anchor id='Pg037'/>
+have at most only about 25 votes at their disposal&mdash;a
+small number in an assembly of 400 or 500 bishops.
+But if these 25 votes, which represent nearly eighteen
+million Catholics, and the whole of a great nation,
+remain united and firm, they are a guarantee that the
+new dogmas will not be decreed. For it is not majorities
+or minorities that decide on dogmas, but the Church
+requires the actual or approximate unanimity of the
+whole assembly. And it may be assumed as probable
+that the Austrian Bishops will not separate themselves
+from their German colleagues in these weighty questions,
+except, of course, the Bishop of St. Pölten, who already
+openly declares himself for the principal new dogma,
+and will therefore no doubt vote for it. It may, moreover,
+be confidently asserted that a considerable portion
+of the French Bishops will unite with the German
+Opposition against the new dogmas. And an Opposition
+so numerous and so compact will make it impossible
+for the Latin Prelates to carry through their pet
+doctrines, powerful as they may appear, if their votes
+are counted and not weighed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From another point of view, too, the Pastoral is noteworthy
+and gratifying. It markedly discountenances
+that pessimism which for some thirty years past has
+characterized Papal documents, and which gave occasion
+<pb n='038'/><anchor id='Pg038'/>
+to the observation that Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> and his predecessor
+whine whenever they talk Latin. Occurrences in Italy,
+Spain, and Germany, and the history of the Austrian
+Concordat, with many other things, have led most of the
+clerical organs to take a gloomy view of the state of the
+world; and we frequently find them maintaining that
+a universal overthrow of the whole order of society in
+the Christian world, a universal deluge, is inevitable, but
+that the ship of the Church, the one asylum of safety, will
+float, like the ark, upon the waves, and then will begin
+a new order of things, and new period of history corresponding
+to the ultramontane ideal. In sharp antithesis
+to these gloomy pictures and predictions, the Bishops
+declare, <emph>first</emph>, that throughout the world the kingdom of
+God increases with fresh vigour, and brings forth fruit;
+<emph>secondly</emph>, that all attacks on the Church, and sufferings
+brought upon her, work for her good; and <emph>thirdly</emph>, that
+religious and ecclesiastical life is strengthened. Such
+a view as this is better calculated to arouse and sustain
+attachment to the Church and confidence in her indestructible
+powers of life and providential guidance than
+the opposite view, which exhibits to Catholics everywhere
+nothing but the humiliation of their Church and
+the triumph of her enemies.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='039'/><anchor id='Pg039'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>The Bishops and the Council. (Allg. Zeit., Nov. 19 and 20, 1869.)</head>
+
+<p>
+As the moment for the opening of the Council
+approaches, the excitement and disquiet, not only of
+Catholics but of all who concern themselves with the
+movements of the day, increases in view of so important
+an event. For the notion that the Council is merely
+an internal affair of the Catholic Church, and that its
+decrees will be confined to the sphere of the religious
+conscience, will be accepted by nobody who has heard of
+the projects entertained by the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and who is not
+ignorant of the close connection of the Church with the
+culture of modern life, and the powerful position this
+gives her in the State and in the social order generally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We may safely state that the Fathers of the Council
+are already divided into two camps, and that anxiety
+and painful uncertainty prevail in both of them. The
+occurrences of the last few weeks have brought out
+their opposite views and designs into sharp contrast. It
+is now known in Rome that a considerable number of
+Northern Bishops are not disposed to accept the <foreign rend='italic'>rôle</foreign>
+assigned to them of simple assent to ready-made decrees,
+and that the German Bishops, except those trained by the
+<pb n='040'/><anchor id='Pg040'/>
+Jesuits, most decisively object to making new articles of
+faith. Many Bishops also dread the far-reaching consequences
+of Papal Infallibility, and the retrospective
+effects of the new dogma, and they know that the establishment
+of such doctrines would drive the educated
+classes of the country, if not into open schism, to an internal
+and lamentable breach with the Church. Accordingly,
+remonstrances have been forwarded to the Pope
+from three quarters&mdash;from the Prelates of Hungary, Bohemia,
+and Germany,&mdash;expressing the most emphatic
+desire that the Council should not be forced to any decision
+on Papal Infallibility, or on matters affecting the
+relations of Church and State, in the sense of the Syllabus.
+What reception this document met with in Rome
+may readily be divined from the great astonishment the
+Fulda Pastoral is known to have excited there, when a
+translation of it was laid before the Pope. It is now
+thought politic in Rome to deny the existence of these
+letters of remonstrance, but they have taken such effect
+that the highest authorities begin to hesitate, and ask
+themselves the question whether they have not gone
+too far in their confident assurance of victory. The idea
+of being able to carry the Infallibility dogma off-hand
+by acclamation seems at least to have been abandoned.
+<pb n='041'/><anchor id='Pg041'/>
+It is understood that some less summary method of
+gaining their object must be resorted to, if it is to be
+gained at all. And hence at the last moment they have
+begun to look out for some Council Chamber where the
+Bishops may discuss the matters to be decided upon,
+for the chapels appropriated to the Council in St. Peter's
+are only designed for solemn sessions.<note place='foot'>This design does not seem to have been persevered in.</note> It is said in
+Rome that the pungent remark of a Cardinal to the Holy
+Father has had something to do with the change of the
+original scheme of an acclamation. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> had asked
+his opinion as to the most effective way of carrying the
+decrees, and he replied, that obviously the <emph>theatrical</emph> effect
+would be greater if there was no debating, but simply
+decision by acclamation, as though by inspiration of the
+Holy Ghost. And thus the hope of getting the Council
+over in three weeks is also given up, and it is now expected
+to last to the Feast of St. Peter and St. Paul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The drawing up of the letter of remonstrance at
+Fulda is said not to have been such plain sailing. The
+Pastoral originally sketched out by Heinrich, Canon of
+Mayence, but to which important additions were made
+subsequently, was subscribed by all the Bishops, even
+those who had been pupils of the Jesuits, who consoled
+<pb n='042'/><anchor id='Pg042'/>
+themselves with the belief that the dogma of Infallibility
+did exactly combine the conditions specified
+there as requisite for a dogmatic decree, and was
+really scriptural, primitive, and written on the hearts
+of all good Catholics. So their Jesuit masters had
+taught and assured them. But the secret document
+sent to the Pope had necessarily to be more explicit,
+and though it was limited to pointing out how inopportune
+the definition of new dogmas, especially of Papal
+Infallibility, would be, that was precisely opposite to
+what the Jesuitizers among the Bishops were convinced
+of. The Jesuits themselves lose no opportunity of
+proclaiming that nothing can be more opportune than
+this dogma, and from their own point of view they may
+be right enough, for the rich and ripe fruits of the
+dogma would fall into their own laps, and would help
+the Society to absolute dominion over science, literature,
+and education within the Catholic Church. The
+proposed dogma would give canonical authority to the
+Jesuit theology, and identify it with the doctrine of the
+Church, and the Order, or the spirit of the Order, would
+always be required for teaching and vindicating the
+new system. The Bishops of Paderborn and Würzburg
+therefore refused to sign, and the representative of the
+Bishop of Spires followed their example.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='043'/><anchor id='Pg043'/>
+
+<p>
+The scruples of these Northern Bishops were so utterly
+unexpected that they must have created great surprise
+at Rome. Their informant in the matter of the Infallibility
+dogma had assured the authorities, in the teeth of
+the Northern Prelates, and with the full concurrence of all
+the members of the Commission, that no fitter or more
+favourable time could be found for establishing the new
+dogma, for at no former period could the Court of Rome
+reckon so securely on the unconditional devotion of the
+Bishops, nor was there ever a time when they were so
+ready as at this moment to surrender before the Pope
+all exercise of their own judgment or independent
+examination. The remonstrances of the Hungarian,
+Bohemian, and German Bishops have of course poured
+water into this wine, to the no small astonishment and
+indignation of the Roman Prelates, with whom it is an
+axiom that nobody is a good Christian who does not
+believe the infallibility of the Pope as firmly as the
+divine mission and truthfulness of Christ. Accordingly,
+the <hi rend='italic'>Correspondance de Rome</hi> cast in the teeth of Prince
+Hohenlohe, that since all true Catholics already hold
+the infallibility of the Pope when speaking <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign>,
+a decree of the Council will only confirm what is universally
+<pb n='044'/><anchor id='Pg044'/>
+known and believed.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Corresp. de Rome</hi>, 1869, p. 384: <q>L'infallibilité du Pape, décidant
+en matière de foi <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign>, c'est-à-dire comme maître de l'Eglise étant
+déjà admise par tous les vrais catholiques, un décret du Concil fera juste
+l'effet d'une confirmation d'une chose universellement sue et crue.</q></note> Let those good souls who
+flatter themselves that the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, with its expectations
+and demands, stands alone, weigh well the utterances
+of so well-known a journal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Austrian Bishops have not thought it well to
+follow the example of their Hungarian, Bohemian, and
+German colleagues. One of them, Dr. Fessler, is notoriously
+the most determined advocate of the whole
+ultramontane system, and was the first Bishop to declare
+the definition of the new dogma to be at once a
+natural and suitable work for the Council. His services
+were promptly rewarded; he is already named chief
+secretary of the Council, and his hand will press heavily
+on its decrees. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> may congratulate itself on
+its choice. The silence of the Austrian Bishops is
+further explained by the differences of opinion among
+them about the questions coming before the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In their secret letters the Northern Bishops have
+opposed the new definition only as being inopportune,
+and it is known that the French Opposition Bishops
+mean to take the same ground. But it deserves careful
+<pb n='045'/><anchor id='Pg045'/>
+consideration whether this line of action can be
+really tenable or effective at the Council. Surely it
+may be certainly foreseen that the far more numerous,
+and, from its determined attitude, stronger party on the
+other side will answer, <q>If your only objection to the
+dogma is that it is unsuited for the times, you thereby
+admit its truth; for if you thought it doubtful or
+erroneous, you must have opposed the definition on
+that ground. By not venturing to assail its truth, you
+deprive your objection to its opportuneness of all
+weight, for when was ever a religious truth, on which
+eternal salvation depends, suppressed on such a ground
+as this? Does this holding back, inspired merely by fear
+of men, correspond to the ancient spirit and lofty mission
+of the Church? How many of her doctrines would she
+have dared to proclaim if she had chosen to wait on the
+approval of the age? Rather, for that very reason, must
+religious truths be loudly and emphatically proclaimed,
+when a contrary opinion is growing among men, because
+thereby an insidious heresy is marked out and
+judged by the supreme authority in the Church. Your
+plea of inopportuneness is therefore a fresh and urgent
+ground for adhering firmly to the solemn definition of
+Infallibility by the Council.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='046'/><anchor id='Pg046'/>
+
+<p>
+How far better then would it be if these Prelates
+were to declare simply and directly, what the German
+Bishops have indeed said in their Pastoral, but, of
+course, in general terms only, and without express
+mention of the Infallibilist hypothesis; <q>This doctrine
+possesses none of the requisite conditions of an article
+of faith; it has no guarantee either of Scripture or
+Tradition, and no roots in the conscience and religious
+mind of the Christian world.</q> Such a line would be
+incomparably worthier of the Bishops, and would make
+their position far stronger and more unassailable. Instead
+of letting themselves, as is intended, be yoked, like
+willing prisoners, to the triumphal chariot of the sole
+infallible and sole defining Pope and lord, they
+would be making a beginning for the revendication of
+their ancient apostolical rights, which the Papacy has
+sequestered or robbed them of. They would be asserting,
+by implication, that the Papacy and the Church
+are not identical, and therefore that the Church cannot
+be made responsible for all decrees and actions of the
+Popes. Half-and-half courses, and false piety, in the
+tremendous crisis the Catholic Church is now entering
+upon, are not only powerless but fatal. And this half-heartedness,
+which looks only too like fear, will make
+<pb n='047'/><anchor id='Pg047'/>
+the Ultramontane and Jesuit party all the bolder and
+stronger in their plans. And they continue still as
+firm as the rock of Peter. In the number for Oct. 2,
+p. 64, the Civiltà maintains, against a new French
+paper, the <hi rend='italic'>Avenir Catholique</hi>, that the relation of
+the Bishops assembled in Council to the Pope is
+simply one of most absolute subjection and obedience
+to Papal commands, and declares, on the authority
+of Ferraris, who is a classical authority at
+Rome, what is meant by <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>præsidentia auctoritativa</foreign>, viz.,
+the Pope's right, not only to decide on everything, but
+to coerce all opponents, by ecclesiastical censures&mdash;excommunication,
+suspension, and deposition&mdash;and other
+judicial means.<note place='foot'><q>Præsidentia auctoritativa dicitur ... insuper cum auctoritate
+coactivâ compescendi etiam per censuras ecclesiasticas, et alia juris media
+contradictores et rebelles et contumaces, prout ex constitutione <hi rend='smallcaps'>xi.</hi> Martini
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, etc.</q></note> If the Pope strikes down every contradiction
+or refusal of a Bishop at once, with the thunderbolt
+of his anathemas, according to the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> he no
+more violates the freedom belonging to the Fathers of
+the Council, than a man who keeps within his own
+rights in his dealings violates his neighbour's rights of
+property. We must remember, as to this definition of
+freedom, that the logic of the Jesuits has always gone
+<pb n='048'/><anchor id='Pg048'/>
+its own way without troubling itself with the logic of
+the rest of mankind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It deserves notice, however, that two months before
+the opening of the Council the Jesuits had traced out
+for the Bishops the extent and nature of the freedom
+they are to enjoy there. They do their part frankly
+enough in dispelling any illusion on the subject. If
+any complaint from the Bishops should be heard in Rome,
+such as was made by the Spanish and French Bishops at
+Trent, the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> can reply that they were told all this
+beforehand. The <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> has the most direct sources of
+information, and may therefore be safely trusted when it
+says, in a recent number, <q>We are not the authors of the
+Papal thoughts, nor does Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> speak and act under
+our inspiration, but <emph>we are certainly the faithful echo of
+the Holy See</emph>.</q> And, as an echo of the Pope, the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà,</hi>
+in its last number, p. 182, gives a more precise explanation
+or statement of the infallibility of <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign>
+decisions, as extending, not only to all dogmas, but to
+<q>all truths and doctrines connected with the various
+kinds of revealed dogmas, and so to all sentences and
+decrees concerning the common weal of the Church,
+her rights and discipline.</q> In truth, if the Bishops don't
+even yet see the precipice to the edge of which they have
+<pb n='049'/><anchor id='Pg049'/>
+been led step by step for years, and which they are just
+going to spring into, that is no fault of the Roman
+Jesuits, who have honestly done what they could to
+open their eyes. It is therefore to be earnestly wished
+that the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> may be read and well weighed as
+widely as possible, for then one may hope they will
+be <q>forewarned, forearmed.</q> They have certainly had
+no lack of signs and warning voices, who are expected
+and are willing to subscribe the intended decrees of the
+Council. <q>The true echo of the Holy See</q> proclaims to
+the world that every Pope is, ever has been, and ever
+will be infallible, <emph>first</emph>, when he teaches or maintains anything
+in any way connected with revealed truths of faith
+or morals; <emph>secondly</emph>, when he decrees anything affecting
+the welfare, rights, or discipline of the Church. Clearly
+therefore, henceforth the question will be, not in what
+cases the Pope is infallible, but what are the few cases
+where he is not infallible. He, as being infallible, will
+have the first and only right to determine what is the
+welfare of the Church, and what it requires. And since,
+in the whole range of public life, of politics and science,
+there is scarcely anything not permanently or incidentally
+connected with the weal of the Church, and with its real
+or assumed rights and discipline, he will have it in his
+<pb n='050'/><anchor id='Pg050'/>
+power to make every secular question a Church question.
+For it must certainly be anathematized as an error,
+as the Syllabus says, to affirm that the Pope has exceeded
+the limits of his power. How can he possibly do so on
+this theory? He is infallible alike in the definition of
+doctrine and in its application to concrete cases. He is
+therefore always right in every claim and every decision,
+and whoever opposes him, or does not at once
+unconditionally submit, is always wrong. Whatever
+demand he makes of any State or Sovereign, whatever
+law or constitution he abrogates, he must at once be
+obeyed, for he acts for the good of the Church, and he, as
+being infallible, can alone judge and settle what that is.
+The episcopate and clergy must blindly submit to his
+infallible guidance and serve dutifully under his banner,
+when he proclaims war against a State, or an institution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Need we explain in detail what painful conflicts with
+their Governments and the Constitutions they have sworn
+to, Bishops and clergy, nay all Catholics, might be precipitated
+into on this system? What caused that lamentable
+persecution and oppression of Catholics in Great
+Britain, and their loss of civil privileges for centuries, but
+Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>'s prohibiting their taking the oath of allegiance
+<pb n='051'/><anchor id='Pg051'/>
+to their Sovereigns? Although the oath contained nothing
+against the religious conscience of Catholics, the
+Pope condemned it because, identifying his own pretensions
+with the interests of the Church, he thought it intolerable
+that it denied the power of Popes to depose
+kings, absolve subjects from their allegiance, and excite
+revolt and treason against the Sovereign and the State.
+It is a maxim of the Decretals that no oath against the
+interests of the Church is binding.<note place='foot'><q>Juramentum contra utilitatem ecclesiasticam præstitum non tenet.</q>&mdash;Lib.
+ii. tit. 24, c. 27; Sext. Lib. i. t. 2, c. 1.</note> But what is for
+the benefit of the Church the infallible Pope determines.
+How often have Popes identified their own political
+interests with the good of the Church, and required
+and occasioned the breach of oaths and treaties! Thus
+Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> absolved John from his oath to observe
+Magna Charta, on his consenting to receive back his
+crown as a gift from him. When, in the fifteenth century,
+Eugenius <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> was at war with Francis Sforza, and
+the general Piccinino had promised not to attack him,
+the Pope absolved him from his promise, because it
+was prejudicial to the interests of the Papacy, and <q>a
+treaty prejudicial to the Church is not binding.</q> Charles
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> and Francis <hi rend='smallcaps'>i.</hi>, in their treaty of Madrid, had stipulated
+<pb n='052'/><anchor id='Pg052'/>
+that neither should have his oath dispensed without
+the consent of the other; but Pope Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi>
+was the first to seduce the King to commit perjury, in
+order that he might form an alliance with him against
+the Emperor. So again did Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> release Henry <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi>
+from his five years' truce with Charles <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, confirmed by
+oath, in order to gain the King of France as an ally
+against Spain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Jesuit theory of the infallible Pope and the
+extent of his powers is in no way less extravagant than
+that which deluded Agostino Trionfo into his deification
+of the Pope under John <hi rend='smallcaps'>xxii.</hi><note place='foot'>Cf. <q>Janus,</q> p. 230.</note> Once admit the maxim
+of the Syllabus, that the Popes have never exceeded the
+just limits of their power, and it must obviously be their
+right to dispose of crowns and peoples, property and
+freedom, since they have in fact claimed and exercised
+the right. Thus, for instance, Nicolas <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> did not at all
+violate the common rights of men, but only made a proper
+use of his own absolute authority, when he gave
+full power to King Alfonso of Portugal, and his successors,
+to subjugate unbelieving nations, appropriate their
+territories and all their possessions, and reduce their
+persons to perpetual slavery. Nor was Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi>
+<pb n='053'/><anchor id='Pg053'/>
+less justified in conferring on Ferdinand and Isabella of
+Spain and their successors the newly discovered countries
+of America, and then drawing the famous line from
+north to south through the New World, and dividing it
+between Spain and Portugal. It was to the authority
+of the Pope, as the lord of all mankind, to whom all
+men are subject, wherever born, and of whatever religion,
+since God has subjected the whole earth to his
+jurisdiction, and made him master of it, that the Spanish
+conquerors appealed against the natives. On this plea
+they treated all refusal to submit as rebellion, for which
+they meant to take vengeance on the natives&mdash;as in fact
+they did in the most horrible manner&mdash;by cruel wars,
+confiscation of property, and slavery. Their lust of conquest,
+with all the abominations they perpetrated, could
+always be excused and justified by the remembrance
+that they were only acting with the sanction of God's
+earthly representative, and punishing the refusal to
+recognise his legitimate dominion over the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the article we have cited, the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> affirmed anew,
+on the authority of the Minorite, Bonaventure of S.
+Bernardino (<hi rend='italic'>Trattato della Chiesa</hi>), that the Pope can
+dispose of the whole <q>Temporali</q> of kings and princes,
+their authority and possessions, whenever, in his judgment,
+<pb n='054'/><anchor id='Pg054'/>
+the good of the Church requires it. The work
+of a French writer, Maupied, gives the Fathers of the
+Society of Jesus the desired opportunity of again commending
+their <hi rend='italic'>Magna Charta</hi>&mdash;their favourite Bull,
+<hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi>&mdash;as the completest exposition of the
+relations of Church and State (p. 213): <q>Fall down on
+your faces, and adore your lord and master in Rome,
+who can after his pleasure depose you, deprive you of
+your rights and bishoprics, and bid you draw or sheathe
+the sword.</q> This is a compendium of the teaching the
+<hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> addresses to princes and magistrates. If Papal
+Infallibility is defined by the Council as an article of
+faith, the whole system is sanctioned, down to its extremest
+consequences, and the Jesuits will not fail to
+point to it as proving that their political doctrines also
+are now approved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under such auspices does the Council open, when the
+Bishops, according to the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>&mdash;<q>the faithful echo of
+the Holy See,</q>&mdash;have only to say Yea and Amen to the
+teachings and commands of their master. Never in
+her whole history has the Church had a severer task
+imposed upon her, or passed through a more perilous
+and decisive crisis than the present. It is not only a
+question of internal freedom; it is, above all, the question
+<pb n='055'/><anchor id='Pg055'/>
+whether she is to be involved in an endless war
+with the political order and civilisation of the modern
+world, or by keeping to the really religious sphere,
+and thus guarding her rightful independence, is for the
+future too to fulfil throughout the widest area her
+blessed mission towards mankind. The Council, which
+has to decide on this alternative, acquires a weight and
+significance such as none had before it.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='059'/><anchor id='Pg059'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>First Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, December 1869.</hi>&mdash;The Council is opened. It
+is, we may say, in full swing, and the situation has to
+a certain degree revealed itself. Two great questions
+are in every mind and on every tongue&mdash;<emph>first</emph>, <q>Wherein
+will the freedom promised to the Council consist, and
+how far will it extend?</q> and <emph>secondly</emph>, <q>Will Papal
+Infallibility be erected into a dogma?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As regards the freedom of the Council, the position
+of the episcopate is in some respects better and in
+others worse than at Trent three centuries ago. Then
+the Italians had the most complete and undeniable
+preponderance over the Spanish and French Prelates,
+who were the only others that came into the reckoning
+at all. The opposition of the latter could at best only
+stop the passing of some particular decrees, but, generally
+speaking, whatever the legates and their devoted
+troop of Italian Prelates desired was carried, and as
+<pb n='060'/><anchor id='Pg060'/>
+they desired it. The numerical relations are entirely
+changed now, and there is a far more comprehensive
+representation of National Churches. The Italian
+Bishops, even if unanimous among themselves, do not
+form a third of the whole Synod. But what they have
+lost in numbers is abundantly made up by the lion's
+share the Papal Court seizes beforehand for itself, and
+thereby for the Italian <foreign rend='italic'>prelatura</foreign>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first step taken, and the regulations already made
+by Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> for the present Council, prove that it is not
+to follow the precedents of the ancient free Councils,
+or even of the Tridentine. At Trent all decrees still
+ran in the name of the Council. <q>The Œcumenical
+Tridentine Synod, lawfully assembled in the Holy
+Ghost, ordains and decrees, etc.,</q> is the heading of every
+session and its decrees. Very different is to be the
+arrangement at Rome. There has already been distributed
+to the Bishops a <hi rend='italic'>Methodus in primâ Sessione
+Concilii observanda</hi>, which prescribes thus: <q>The Pope
+will hand over the decrees to the Secretary or another
+Bishop to read, who reads them with the heading,
+<q>Pius, Episcopus, servus servorum Dei, <emph>sacro approbante
+Concilio</emph>, ad perpetuam rei memoriam.</q></q> After reading
+them he asks the Cardinals and Bishops whether they
+<pb n='061'/><anchor id='Pg061'/>
+assent. If all say <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>, the Pope declares the decrees
+carried <q>nemine dissentiente.</q> If some answer, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non
+placet</foreign>, he mentions the number, and adds, <q>Nosque,
+sacro approbante Concilio, illa ita decernimus, statuimus
+atque sancimus ut lecta sunt.</q> This is the formula
+first introduced after Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi>'s time, when
+the Papacy had climbed to its mediæval eminence.
+The first to use it was Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>, at the Roman
+Synod of 1079.<note place='foot'>[The third Lateran Council.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> It stands in glaring contrast to the
+practice of the ancient Synods for the first thousand
+years of Church history, which drew up and promulgated
+all their decisions freely, independently, and in
+their own name. Here the Pope appears as the author
+of the decrees, the one authoritative legislator, who out
+of courtesy allows the Bishops to express their opinions,
+but finally decides himself, in the plenitude of his
+sovereign power, as seems good to him. In another
+Papal document communicated to the Bishops it is
+said still more emphatically, <q>Nos deinde supremam
+nostram sententiam edicemus eamque nunciari et promulgari
+mandabimus, hâc adhibitâ solemni formulâ,
+Decreta modo lecta, etc.</q> Meanwhile one concession
+has been made, which might possibly have some value:
+<pb n='062'/><anchor id='Pg062'/>
+the Pope has declared that, though the right of initiating
+measures belongs entirely to himself, he is willing to
+allow the Bishops to exercise it. This would give
+them the opportunity of at least bringing forward for
+discussion some of the worst evils&mdash;such as, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, what
+many of them feel to be the hateful nuisance of the
+Index&mdash;and preparing remedies. But then it must be
+borne in mind that on every question the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> has at
+its disposal a majority of Prelates, who are its own
+creatures, and many of them in its pay. With the
+help of this troop of devoted followers it can get rid of
+every disagreeable proposal before it is even submitted
+to discussion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Sessions of the Council are solemnities only held
+for the formal promulgation of decrees already discussed
+and passed; the real business is done in the previous
+Congregations. Every Bishop who wants to speak
+there is to give notice the day before, but those who
+wish to speak without having given notice are not to
+be prevented. A congregation of twenty-four members
+is to be chosen by the Bishops from among themselves,
+for the purpose of specially investigating subjects on
+which differences of opinion have been expressed, and
+reporting on them. At least nine-tenths of the Prelates
+<pb n='063'/><anchor id='Pg063'/>
+are condemned to silence simply from being unable
+to speak Latin readily and coherently through want of
+regular practice. And to this must be added the diversities
+of pronunciation. It is impossible, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, that
+Frenchmen or Italians should understand an Englishman's
+Latin even for a minute.<note place='foot'>The Scotch pronounce Latin much as the Germans do.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There will no doubt be some subjects on which the
+Bishops may really speak and determine freely. But
+the moment a question in any way affects the interests
+and rights of the Roman <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, there is an end of their
+freedom. For every Bishop has sworn not only to
+maintain but constantly to increase all the rights of the
+Pope, and it is notorious that at Rome, and in regular
+intercourse with the Papal Congregations, one can take
+no step without being reminded, directly or indirectly&mdash;by
+courtly insinuation, or rudely and openly,&mdash;of
+this oath, and the enormous extent of the obligations
+incurred by it, which embrace the whole range of
+ecclesiastical life. The Bishops then are so far free in
+Council, that no Bishop who expresses an opinion
+unpalatable to the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> is threatened with imprisonment
+or bodily injury.<note place='foot'>[Even this must be taken with reserve.&mdash;Cf. <hi rend='italic'>infra</hi>, pp. <ref target='Pg174'>174</ref>, <ref target='Pg175'>175</ref>.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> Those Bishops enjoy a larger
+<pb n='064'/><anchor id='Pg064'/>
+freedom who have the moral courage to incur the reproach
+of perjury and the threat of Papal displeasure
+and its consequences; who, knowing well that they can
+only carry out the most indispensable rights and duties
+of their office by virtue of Papal privileges and delegations&mdash;quinquennial
+faculties and the like,&mdash;yet vote
+simply according to their convictions.<note place='foot'>[Most of the rights originally inherent in the episcopate are now reserved
+to the Pope, who only allows Bishops to exercise them during
+good behaviour, by virtue of <q>faculties</q> renewed every five years. Cf.
+<q>Janus,</q> p. 422, note.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> The only question
+is how many Bishops will act thus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The members of the Court of Rome vie with one
+another in assurances that perfect freedom will be left
+to the Bishops in the grand question of the proclamation
+of the new dogma of Papal Infallibility. This is confidently
+asserted by those Germans who are more deeply
+initiated into the views of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, such as the
+Jesuits Franzelin, Schrader, and Kleutgen. And above
+all, Bishop Fessler, the Secretary of the Council and
+favourite of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, who was the first among the
+Bishops to declare that it was the main business of the
+Council to formulate and proclaim the new dogma, takes
+especial pains to convince the Bishops that the Pope
+has no intention of bringing the subject before them
+<pb n='065'/><anchor id='Pg065'/>
+himself. He admits that the preparatory Commission
+has discussed this most important and comprehensive
+of all doctrines, and has almost unanimously decided it
+to be both true and opportune; and that their reporter
+has shown conclusively, that considering the boundless
+devotion to Rome of the present episcopate (at least
+the majority of them), no more favourable moment
+could be chosen for enriching the Church with this
+new and fundamental article of faith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is now their watchword. All the initiated
+repeat it, and some episcopal optimists try to persuade
+themselves and others that the danger is really
+past, and the scheme abandoned for this time. But
+the truth is this: the authorities know well enough
+that the absolutists among the Bishops&mdash;all those who
+hope to strengthen their dominion and extend it over
+secular matters by means of Papal Infallibility&mdash;are
+both numerous and organized, and only await the intimation
+that the right moment has arrived to come forward
+themselves with a motion powerfully supported.
+To begin with the Germans, there is the Bishop of
+Paderborn, whose Jesuit theologian, Roh, says that, precisely
+because Papal Infallibility is called in question by
+Bishops like Dupanloup and Maret, the Council must
+<pb n='066'/><anchor id='Pg066'/>
+define it, to make any repetition of this atrocity impossible
+for the future. Then there are the Bishops of
+Regensburg, Würzburg, St. Pölten, and Gratz, the
+Belgian and English Prelates, and those of French
+Switzerland, among whom Mermillod rivals Manning
+in his fanatical zeal for the new dogma; the Spanish
+Prelates&mdash;men selected for promotion by Queen Isabella
+and the nuncio at Madrid, simply for their thorough-paced
+ultramontanism&mdash;pure absolutists in Church and
+State, who would gladly see the new dogma ready-made
+at once, but have to be restrained for a while. To
+these must be added such French Prelates as Plantier
+of Nîmes, Pie of Poitiers, the Bishops of Laval and
+Montauban, and others. One knows least of the votes
+of the Italian and United States Bishops, who, like the
+Irish, will probably be divided. In any case the Court
+party can count on a considerable majority in favour of
+the new dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of course the opposite party, who wish to stave it off,
+is strong and numerous. To it belong the majority of
+the German and Austrian, as well as the Bohemian and
+Hungarian Prelates, and among the French, the Archbishops
+of Paris, Rheims, and Avignon, the Bishops of
+Marseilles, Grenoble, Orleans, Chalons, and many more.
+<pb n='067'/><anchor id='Pg067'/>
+And on the point of the time being inopportune for defining
+the Infallibilist dogma, a portion of the <q>old
+Papal guard,</q>&mdash;viz., the Italian Bishops&mdash;will join them,
+not to speak of American and Irish Prelates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But&mdash;and in this lies their weakness&mdash;they are only
+held together by a very loose bond. The one point
+they are agreed upon is that the promulgation of the
+new dogma will cause great embarrassments to the
+Church and to themselves personally, and involve them
+in all sorts of conflicts. On the main question, whether
+this substitution of an infallible man for an infallible
+Church is true, and attested by Scripture and Tradition,
+they are themselves divided. If the confidants of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> understand how to insert the wedge into this
+split, and drive it home, they may perhaps contrive to
+break up the whole Opposition, and carry through, by
+an imposing and apparently almost unanimous vote,
+this Alpha and Omega of ultramontanism, in which all
+their wishes and hopes are concentrated. Meanwhile
+no stone will be left unturned, and very various methods
+will be applied, and arguments used, in working upon
+different Bishops. The earnest desire of the Holy
+Father will be urged on some soft-hearted Prelates;
+they will be told that the only way the Council can
+<pb n='068'/><anchor id='Pg068'/>
+rejoice his heart amid his bitter trials, and brighten the
+evening of his life, is by freely offering him that crown
+of personal infallibility which former Popes have striven
+for, but never obtained. To others it will be intimated
+that the Council itself must look like a play with the
+chief figure left out, or an abortion, if the Syllabus and
+Infallibility are not made into dogmas, for there is no
+other question important enough to justify collecting
+500 Bishops from five quarters of the world. Those
+who agree with the doctrine, but shrink for the present
+from the unpleasant consequences it might entail upon
+them, will be told, <q>Now, or perhaps never.</q> With freedom
+of the press established everywhere, it will be impossible
+much longer to keep the poison of historical criticism, so
+especially rife in Germany, out of the theological schools
+and seminaries, and so perhaps the next generation of
+clergy will not believe so absolutely in Papal Infallibility
+as the clergy in many countries do now, and then the new
+dogma will come at an unseasonable time, and encounter
+powerful opposition. Besides, it is best to lose no
+time in putting the iron bar of the new dogma across
+the way, for then all historical facts that witness against
+Infallibility, all results of criticism and investigation,
+all appeals to the forgeries and fictions which helped to
+<pb n='069'/><anchor id='Pg069'/>
+build up the edifice, are once for all got rid of and
+destroyed, at least within the Church. No Catholic
+will any longer venture to appeal to them, and if he is
+an historical student, he will only be able to console
+himself by saying, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Credo, quia absurdum</foreign>. The dogma
+has triumphed over history, as Manning has so admirably
+explained in his last Pastoral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their favourite argument is the common one about
+increasing the strength and security of the coercive
+power of the Church. The Bishops are told that the
+personal infallibility of the Pope will make not only
+him but them, his delegates and plenipotentiaries, much
+more powerful, and that under its shadow they will rule
+with a stronger hand, for resistance will, in most cases,
+be blasphemy against the Holy Ghost, speaking through
+the Pope and his chosen instruments. Who, for instance,
+would any longer dare to defend a book condemned
+by the Congregation of the Index, after it had
+become infallible? On the other hand, the Bishops
+have their scruples, and some of them may be heard
+saying that this would be a poor consolation for losing
+half their episcopal authority, and that it is hard to ask
+them to degrade themselves, and renounce their former
+dignity as the supreme tribunal of faith, by making the
+<pb n='070'/><anchor id='Pg070'/>
+Pope infallible. It might not be pleasant to return
+home from the Council with the consciousness of having
+themselves abdicated at Rome the best, and what has
+hitherto been held in the Church the highest, part
+of their authority, and burned it as a holocaust on the
+altar of Papal autocracy. The <foreign rend='italic'>rôle</foreign> of a Papal courtier,
+however convenient at Rome, has its dark side north of
+the Alps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Already many symptoms of uneasiness betray themselves.
+Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> said the other day to a German Prince
+of the Church, who formerly gave his opinion against
+the Immaculate Conception, and has now again pronounced
+openly against the Infallibilist dogma, <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>Ce dogme
+de l'infaillibilité passera, comme l'autre, malgré vous</foreign>.
+On the other hand, the <hi rend='italic'>Regolamento</hi> has excited great
+discontent, for it unmistakeably indicates the design of
+giving the Pope the decision, and making the Bishops
+only consultors. Had the assembly been in some
+degree prepared for it, and had time allowed them for
+coming to an understanding, there would certainly have
+been opposition to it. But the heads of the French episcopate
+have only just come together, and no attempt even
+has been made to bring the German and French Bishops
+into communication with each other. And a feature of
+<pb n='071'/><anchor id='Pg071'/>
+Roman policy about the Council, now first introduced,
+is not exactly calculated to promote confidence and a
+happy expectation of the prosperous results of the
+Synod. I mean the rigid secrecy. According to the
+last directions, all, bishops and theologians, are to maintain
+the strictest secrecy about everything, and the
+preliminary labours, as is well known, had to be carried
+on under the seal of secrecy of the Holy Office (the Inquisition).
+Nothing was communicated to the Bishops
+themselves, who came to Rome in complete ignorance
+of what they were to vote about&mdash;a procedure without
+any precedent in Church history. It really seems sometimes
+as if the object was to turn the Church topsy-turvy,
+and take pleasure in doing exactly the contrary
+to what the Church of earlier ages did when nearer her
+original foundation. Formerly the idea of a Council
+was associated with the notion of the fullest publicity,
+and the common participation of all the faithful; the
+deliberations were conducted with open doors, and all
+were admitted who wished to hear them,&mdash;for from the
+beginning all secrecy was strange and unnatural to the
+Church, which was distinguished from heathenism in the
+very point of neither having nor tolerating any esoteric
+doctrine or secret compact. But the Roman <foreign rend='italic'>prelatura</foreign>
+<pb n='072'/><anchor id='Pg072'/>
+too shares the Italian predilection for making mysteries,&mdash;as
+evidenced in the number of secret societies in the
+Peninsula,&mdash;and then the Jesuits of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, and their
+French and German copyists, had so solemnly promised
+that the Council would provide in its decrees a sure
+and effective remedy for humanity, sorely diseased as
+it is, and threatened with destruction. As yet we
+have waited in vain for any intelligible intimation of
+what this panacea is to be. Beyond Papal Infallibility
+and the Syllabus, nothing has transpired. Were
+the curtain to be drawn back at the beginning, and the
+secret betrayed,&mdash;that the much lauded panacea is
+only moonshine, and that the Council is not in a position
+to prescribe any other medicine to the patient
+named mankind than the usual and well-known remedies
+of faith, hope, and charity&mdash;the discord, already
+growing, would be still further increased. It is well
+therefore to lay the finger on the lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime the Pope has united the most thorough-paced
+Infallibilists, Manning, Plantier of Nîmes, Pie of
+Poitiers, Mermillod of Geneva, and Deschamps of Mechlin,
+on a Committee said to be intrusted with the discussion
+of very important questions. Manning appears
+to be recognised as their leader by all the adherents of
+<pb n='073'/><anchor id='Pg073'/>
+the new dogma, and Mermillod strongly supports him.
+Cardinal Pitra, the French Benedictine formerly intrusted
+with a mission, which proved unsuccessful, to
+the Archbishop of Rouen, Cardinal Bonnechose, has
+lately tried the same plan with the German Bishops.
+He began by describing the Bishop of Orleans as a
+mischievous teacher of error, and was obliged to hear,
+much to his surprise, that these German Bishops quite
+agreed with Dupanloup, and the Hungarians with the
+Germans. Thus all have taken their side, or will do
+so in the next few days. All the Spanish, Belgian, and
+English<note place='foot'>[This must be taken with some reserve, as will be seen further on.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> Bishops, the majority of the Italians, and a
+considerable number of the French, have ranged themselves
+under the banner of the new dogma. They all
+declare that it must now be decreed that every one,
+without exception, must inwardly believe and outwardly
+confess Papal Infallibility on pain of damnation;
+and all the more so, since Pius himself has now
+abandoned the reserved attitude he had maintained up
+to this time in presence of the diplomatists, and openly
+proclaims, that, being himself profoundly convinced of
+his own infallibility, he neither can nor will tolerate
+<pb n='074'/><anchor id='Pg074'/>
+any further doubt about it in others. And thus the
+influence of this party is very powerful, and already
+preponderates; the whole mechanism of the Council,
+the order of business, the <emph>personnel</emph> of its officers, in
+short everything, is substantially in their hands, or
+will be placed at their disposal. All preparations were
+made in their interest, and all alternatives were foreseen.
+That great ecclesiastical polypus, with its thousand
+feelers and arms, the Jesuit Order, works for it
+under the earth and on the earth; <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Mea res agitur</foreign> is its
+watchword.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the other side, ready for the contest, and resolved
+at least to show fight, stand the German, Bohemian, and
+Hungarian Bishops,&mdash;with the exception, of course, of
+Martin, Senestrey, Fessler, and some others&mdash;and all
+among the French, American, and Irish Bishops who possess
+any culture and knowledge. These men still hope
+to see a portion of the Oriental Bishops&mdash;the real ones,
+not the mere Italian so-called Vicars-Apostolic&mdash;join
+their side, and there is indeed a very general anxiety as
+to what position the Orientals, especially the Armenians,
+will take up in reference to the great questions at issue.
+They would all like to keep the Church free from the
+millstone of the new dogma intended to be hung about
+<pb n='075'/><anchor id='Pg075'/>
+her neck, though very few even among them have a
+clear perception of the momentous consequences it would
+entail, in science and literature, in politics, and in the
+relations of the Catholic Church to other Churches.
+But the whole party has wind and sun against it, and
+has to join battle in the most unfavourable position, on
+slippery soil, and confined to acting on the defensive
+under the greatest difficulties. The Infallibilists,
+from the nature of the case, are far clearer and
+better agreed, both as to end and means, than their
+adversaries, many of whom do not conceal their predilection
+for the dogma, though they tremble at the consequences
+of it. Moreover, many of them will allow
+themselves to be gained over before long, whether
+through devotion to Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>, or by the threats and enticements
+the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> knows so well how to apply, and for
+which it possesses an inexhaustible treasury to choose
+from. There is, for instance, the honorary title granted
+by Rome to about 250 Bishops, <hi rend='italic'>solio Pontificio assistens</hi>,
+which seems to the short-sighted only fit for lackeys,
+but is in fact greatly sought after, and will be most
+graciously accorded to those who unconditionally surrender
+themselves. And then there are those manifold
+concessions out of the rich store of Papal reserved
+<pb n='076'/><anchor id='Pg076'/>
+rights, special benedictions, and the like, so that there
+are always nine out of every ten Bishops who want one
+at least of these privileges.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We may readily conceive the excitement in the Jesuit
+camp. After the patient, indefatigable toil of years of
+seed-time, the harvest-time seems to them to be come at
+last. Up to 1773, their Order, from its numbers, the cultivation
+of its members, the influence of its schools and
+educational establishments, and its compact organization,
+was unquestionably the most powerful religious corporation,
+but at the same time was limited and held in check by
+the influence and powerful position of the other Orders.
+Augustinians, Carmelites, Minorites, and, above all,
+Dominicans, were likewise strong, and, moreover,
+leagued together for harmonious action through their
+common hatred of the Jesuits, or through the natural
+desire to escape being mastered by them. Dominicans
+and Augustinians possessed by long prescription the
+most influential offices in Rome, so much so indeed that
+the two Congregations of the Index and the Holy Office
+were entirely in the hands of the Order of Preachers, to
+the exclusion of the Jesuits. Since the restoration of
+the Jesuits this is completely changed, and entirely in
+their interest. All the ancient Orders are now in
+<pb n='077'/><anchor id='Pg077'/>
+decline, above all, in theological importance and influence;
+they do but vegetate now. Moreover, the Dominicans
+have been saddled with a General thoroughly
+devoted to the Jesuits, Jandel, a Frenchman, who is
+exerting himself to root out in his Order the Thomist
+doctrines, so unpalatable to the Jesuits. The youngest
+of the great Orders, the Redemptorists or Liguorians,
+act&mdash;sometimes willingly, sometimes unwillingly&mdash;as
+the serving brothers, road-makers, and labourers for the
+Jesuits. And hence, now that they enjoy the special
+favour of the Pope, they have come to acquire a power
+in Rome which may be called quite unexampled. They
+have, in fact, become already the legislators and trusted
+counsellors of the Pope, who sees with their eyes and
+hears with their ears. To those familiar with the state
+of things at Rome, it is enough to name Piccirillo. For
+years past they have implanted and fostered in the mind
+of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> the views he now wants to have consecrated
+into dogmas, and have managed to set aside, and at last
+reduce to impotence, the influence of wise men, who
+take a sober view of the condition of the times. When
+the Dominican Cardinal Guidi, who was then the most
+distinguished theologian in Rome, freely expressed to
+the Pope his views about the projected Council and the
+<pb n='078'/><anchor id='Pg078'/>
+measures to be brought before it, from that hour he was
+not only allowed no audience of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>, but was excluded
+from all share in the preparatory labours of the
+Council, so that he remained in entire ignorance of the
+matters to be laid before it. But the Jesuits are also
+the oracles of many Cardinals, whose votes and opinions
+are very often ready-made for them in the Gesu. The
+Congregation of the Index, which they used formerly so
+often to attack, blame, and accuse of partiality, when
+their own works were censured by it, is now becoming
+more and more their own domain, though the chief
+places are still in the hands of the Dominicans; and
+this may gradually take place with most of the Congregations
+in whose hands is centralized the guidance and
+administration of Church affairs in all countries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus, if Papal Infallibility becomes a dogma,
+what inevitably awaits us is, that this Infallibility will
+not merely be worked in certain cases by the counsel
+and direction of the Jesuits; much more than that.
+The Jesuits will for the future be the regular stewards
+of this treasure, and architects of the new dogmas we
+have to expect. They will stamp the dogmatic coinage
+and put it into circulation. It is enough to know the
+earlier history of the Society to know what this means,
+<pb n='079'/><anchor id='Pg079'/>
+and what an immense capital of power and influence it
+will place at their command. <q>Rulers and subjects</q>&mdash;that
+will henceforth be the relation between the
+Jesuits and the theologians of other Orders. Worst
+of all will be the position of theologians and teachers
+who belong to no Order. At the mercy of the
+most contradictory judgments, as is already, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, the
+case in France, constantly exposed to the displeasure
+of the Jesuits, of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and of their Bishop or
+his adviser, and daily threatened in their very existence,
+how are they to get spirit, perseverance, or
+zeal for earnest studies, deep researches, and literary
+activity? Every Jesuit, looking down from the impregnable
+height of his privileged position, will be able to
+cry out to the theologians of the secular clergy, <q>Tu
+longe sequere et vestigia prorsus adora;</q> for now is
+that fulfilled which the Belgian Jesuits demanded 230
+years ago in their <hi rend='italic'>Imago Societatis Jesu</hi>. Their Order is
+now really, and in the fullest sense, the Urim and
+Thummim and breastplate of the High Priest&mdash;the Pope&mdash;who
+can only then issue an oracular utterance when
+he has consulted his breastplate, the Jesuit Order.<note place='foot'><q>Obligatam hærentemque sanctiori Pontifici velut in pectore Societatem.</q>&mdash;Bolland,
+<hi rend='italic'>Imago</hi>, p. 622.</note>
+<pb n='080'/><anchor id='Pg080'/>
+Only one thing was still wanting for the salvation of a
+world redeemed and regenerated once again: the
+Jesuits must again become the confessors of monarchs
+restored to absolute power.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is one of the notes of an age so rich in contradictions
+that the present General of the Order, Father
+Beckx, is not in harmony with the proceedings of his
+spiritual militia. Here, in Rome, he is reported to have
+said, <q>In order to recover two fractions of the States of
+the Church, they are pricking on to a war against the
+world&mdash;but they will lose all.</q> But for that reason, as
+is known, he possesses only the outward semblance of
+Government, while it is really in the hands of a conference.
+With this the fact seems to be connected that he
+has appointed for his theologian at the Council the most
+learned and liberal-minded man of his Order, Father de
+Buck&mdash;a man whose views stand in much the same relation
+to those of his fellow-Jesuits Perrone, Schrader,
+and Curli, as the Bishop of Orleans's views to those of
+the Archbishop of Westminster.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='081'/><anchor id='Pg081'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Second Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Dec. 18, 1869.</hi>&mdash;After the solemn receptions,
+and the formal opening of the Council, visits, audiences,
+and homages, the time for serious business has
+arrived, and the Fathers have emerged from the dim
+twilight of early synodical dawn into the clear daylight.
+People have begun to get mutually acquainted,
+and to question one another. The first chaotic condition
+of an exceedingly mixed assemblage, some of whose
+members scarcely understand one another, or not at all,
+has been succeeded by a sort of division, through the
+<foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>rapprochement</foreign> and closer combination of men of similar
+views. As we related before, two great parties of very
+unequal strength have organized themselves, and the
+shibboleth which caused this division is the question
+of Papal Infallibility, which is universally and consistently
+taken to imply that whoever is resolved to
+vote for this dogma is also ready to give his vote for all
+<pb n='082'/><anchor id='Pg082'/>
+the articles of the Syllabus, and generally for every
+dogmatic proposition emanating from the Pope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Synod is unquestionably the most numerous
+ever held; never in the early or mediæval Church
+have 767 persons entitled to vote by their episcopal rank
+been assembled. It is also the most various in its
+national representation. Men look with wonder at the
+number of missionary Bishops from Asia, Africa, and
+Australia. If one considers the constant complaints
+of want of funds in the missionary journals, the great
+distance, the difficulty and expense of the journey, and
+how much these men are wanted in the ill-organized
+state of their dioceses, with so few priests, the question
+occurs, Who bears the cost, and what means were
+employed to rob so many millions for a long time of
+their spiritual guides? Meanwhile most of the Bishops
+are pupils of the Roman Propaganda, and obedient to
+every hint of its will. And the more the new dogma
+is combated, the more necessary is the imposing <emph>consensus</emph>
+of five quarters of the world&mdash;of Negroes, Malays,
+Chinese, and Hottentots, as well as Italians and
+Spaniards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+More than two-thirds of the Council are either completely
+agreed, or at least won over to the necessity of
+<pb n='083'/><anchor id='Pg083'/>
+making the personal infallibility of the last 256 Popes,
+and their future successors, an article of faith now.
+Since the original design of carrying it by simple acclamation
+has been given up, Manning has renounced the
+<foreign rend='italic'>rôle</foreign> assigned to him of initiating it. But the Bishops
+of the Spanish tongue on both sides the ocean&mdash;in
+South America and the Philippine Isles&mdash;have declared,
+in a meeting held in the apartments of their Cardinal,
+Moreno, that they are ready to propose the dogma.
+A Roman Cardinal said lately of Bishops of this sort,
+<q>If the Pope ordered them to believe and teach four
+instead of three Persons in the Trinity, they would
+obey.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other party, opposed to the dogma, includes
+towards 200 Bishops, and this is more than even the
+most sanguine ventured to hope at first. To it belong
+the majority of the German, Austrian, and Hungarian
+Bishops, half the French, all the Portuguese, some
+Irish, at least half the North American and Canadian,
+and a considerable number of the Oriental. If the
+votes were not only counted, but weighed according to
+the intellectual standard of the voters, the 200 would
+be far the majority. Among the German Bishops,
+besides those already named, the two Tyrolese, Gasser
+<pb n='084'/><anchor id='Pg084'/>
+and Riccabona, Leonrod Bishop of Eichstadt, and the
+Vicar of Luxembourg, belong to the Infallibilists. Ketteler
+of Mayence, half won over by his hosts&mdash;he lives in
+the German College<note place='foot'>[The German College is conducted by the Jesuits.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>&mdash;half succumbing himself, is said
+to purpose deserting to the same camp. He, as well
+as Stahl, Leonrod, and Martin are hampered awkwardly
+by the Fulda Pastoral, which they subscribed, but when
+once the knot is loosened or cut, they have only to
+bring their assent to the new dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is said in the ruling circles that an opposition of
+40 Bishops and under is so small and insignificant in
+so large a Council that no account need be taken of
+it. This would be to give up the principle always
+hitherto maintained, even at Trent, that no decision in
+points of faith could be issued without the physical or
+moral unanimity of the Council. But as the dogma in
+question is one which for the future will make all
+majorities and minorities of episcopal votes superfluous
+and valueless, it may very well be that by anticipation,
+or by virtue of an exception which is now to be made
+into a rule, the minority should in this case be pronounced
+non-existent and undeserving of any notice.
+I hear other curialists say that, as soon as the Opposition
+<pb n='085'/><anchor id='Pg085'/>
+is reduced to 40, they, under a sense of their
+impotence, will give up all resistance, and either quit
+the field, or come over to the conquering side. And so
+the present strength of the Opposition must be greatly
+diminished, and this is being strenuously laboured at.
+There are plenty of means for the purpose, and as long
+as there are Bishops who think themselves fortunate if
+they gain the title of <q>Domestic Prelate to the Pope,</q>
+a gentle pressure or insinuation, the prospect of a privilege,
+or a robe of distinguished colour, will produce the
+desired effect on many. Such things act like those insects
+which bore through the hardest wood. The episcopate
+of course has still many men to show who are
+inaccessible to threats or seduction. But we should like
+to count up at the end of the Council how many have
+passed unscathed through the fiery ordeal. Meanwhile
+a confident certainty of victory prevails among the
+majority. Manning said the other day to an acquaintance
+of mine, <q>So sure as I stand here, the dogma of
+Infallibility will be proclaimed,</q> and on the other hand,
+one of the leading Bishops of the Opposition said lately,
+<q>I came here with small hopes, and with a feeling of
+oppression, but I have found everything worse than I
+expected.</q> A German priest had been summoned to
+<pb n='086'/><anchor id='Pg086'/>
+Rome as theologian of his Order by the General, a
+Spaniard. At first greeting him the General said that
+the great end they were all bound to work for was to
+come to an understanding on the dogma of Papal Infallibility.
+And when the German professed an opposite
+opinion, and handed him a work he had written in that
+sense, the conclusion was soon arrived at: he was sent
+home at once as useless, and even mischievous. When
+he was taking leave of certain Bishops, one of them
+said to him, <q>I should rejoice if any one recalled me or
+sent me home; we Bishops have been ordered here to
+the Council, without being told what we are to deliberate
+upon, and now that I know it I would gladly turn
+my back on the Council and on Rome.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The 500 Infallibilists have good ground for their
+confidence. It is but natural, to begin with, that they
+should trust the magical power of those resources of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> they have themselves had experience of. And,
+next, they are well aware of their excellent organization,
+which has hitherto proved irresistible. They are
+commanded from two centres acting in common, the
+Gesù and the Propaganda. The Jesuit General, Beckx,
+if by no means in harmony with the line taken by the
+<hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, which has been removed from his jurisdiction,
+<pb n='087'/><anchor id='Pg087'/>
+thinks and feels about the Infallibility question in strict
+accordance with the doctrine and rules of his Order,
+and knows how to hold fast the threads with the support
+and counsel of his assistants. Not a few Bishops,
+without knowing it themselves, get drawn and moved
+round by these wires which meet in the Gesù. If they
+cannot be commanded at once, they will be slowly but
+surely led into the right road by a chaplain or secretary
+or consultor devoted to the Order. The Propaganda,
+as we said before, provides for all missionary Bishops,
+and it again is inspired from the Gesù. The whole
+machine works so accurately that lately, in the selecting
+of a Commission, 450 voting papers contained the same
+names. So admirably is the discipline managed that
+many a Cabinet majority might envy this scarcely attainable
+ideal of the Council.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='088'/><anchor id='Pg088'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Third Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Dec. 19, 1869.</hi>&mdash;Since I have been here, breathing
+physically and morally the air of Rome, and have
+heard some of the most prominent Infallibilists, I can
+understand a good deal which was an enigma to me
+when in Germany. The leading spirits of this party
+believe in the advent of a new spiritual dispensation,
+a period of the Holy Ghost, which is to depend on the
+turning-point of this definition of Papal Infallibility.
+Archbishop Manning declared some years ago, in a
+speech received with enthusiastic applause by the
+Roman dignitaries, <q>La Chiesa Cattolica di oggidí esce
+tutta nuova del fianco del Vicario di Gesù Cristo.</q>
+This reference to the formation of the woman from
+Adam's rib is very suggestive, for Eve, by the Divine
+ordinance, was to be subject to the man,&mdash;and it includes
+the notion which I have met with in several quarters
+here, that the proclamation of the new dogma will be
+<pb n='089'/><anchor id='Pg089'/>
+immediately followed by an outpouring of the Holy
+Ghost, and a renewal of the Pentecostal miracle. There
+will of course be this difference, that henceforth the
+Bishops will no longer speak with tongues, like the
+apostles and disciples on the day of Pentecost, but
+only with the tongue of the Infallible Pope, and will
+utter in this way the thoughts and words of the Holy
+Ghost. Hence not the slightest effect is produced when
+any one, say a German or Englishman, points to the
+terrible intellectual stumbling-block that will thereby
+be obtruded on the faithful, and the perplexity and inward
+alienation of so many thousands, and those too the
+higher and leading minds, which may be certainly foreseen.
+The gain will far exceed the loss; numberless
+Protestants and schismatics, attracted by the powerful
+magnet of Papal Infallibility, and the power of the
+Holy Ghost, hidden in Papal utterances, will stream
+into the Church&mdash;that is the sort of vision hovering
+before these men. And a man who believes in an age
+of the Holy Ghost cares nothing for what is said of the
+breach with the views and traditions of the ancient
+Church involved in the new article of faith: he thinks
+it quite in order that a new dogma should inaugurate a
+new era. Compared with such fanaticism, the speech
+<pb n='090'/><anchor id='Pg090'/>
+of another Infallibilist leader, a Frenchman, at a public
+dinner, sounds sober, though in its way it is no less
+extravagant, when he assures us that the great connoisseur
+and discoverer of subterranean Rome, the Cavaliere
+de Rossi, has detected Papal Infallibility in the Catacombs,
+and whoever wants to see and appreciate it
+there, has only to descend into them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> finds that he can undertake what he likes
+with a majority so absolutely devoted to him and
+simply at his beck. The assurance, so often reiterated
+not long ago, that nothing was meant to be decreed
+which could disturb Governments or introduce conflicts
+between Church and State, seems to be already forgotten
+or held superfluous, and a number of Bishops, at a
+general audience, heard, not without consternation, from
+the mouth of the highest authority, the statement that
+the Syllabus must be made dogmatic: it would be
+better to yield in other points than give that up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the Opposition grows visibly stronger, and
+men like Darboy, Dupanloup, and MacHale, Archbishop
+of Tuam,<note place='foot'>[Archbishop MacHale does not seem to have justified this anticipation.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> are not to be despised as leaders. They are
+not content with getting rid of Infallibility and the
+<pb n='091'/><anchor id='Pg091'/>
+Syllabus, but strive for some freedom in the Council,
+and here they find sympathy even among the Infallibilists.
+For to have their hands so completely tied by
+the Pope's regulations, has surpassed all, even the worst,
+anticipations of the Bishops. That first gleam of hope,
+excited by the announcement that the Bishops would
+be allowed to propose motions, has speedily vanished.
+For it has become clear that this was merely intended
+to save the Pope from having to propose his own Infallibility
+to the Council, and provide for the motion
+emanating from the Bishops&mdash;according to the present
+plan, the Spanish Bishops. The right of initiation is
+rendered purely illusory by the fact that the Pope has
+reserved to himself and the Commission he has named,
+composed of the stanchest Infallibilists, the sanction
+or rejection of every motion. To this must be added
+the regulations for the order of business, and the naming
+by the Pope of all the officials of the Council, as
+well as the scrutators and presidents of Congregations
+or Commissions. This is an act of arbitrary power, and
+a gagging of the Council, far beyond anything attempted
+even at Trent. Yet at Trent the want of freedom was
+felt to be so great that for 300 years the Catholic world
+has manifested no desire to repeat the experiment of a
+<pb n='092'/><anchor id='Pg092'/>
+Council. But what will be the impression made by
+the present Council, where the order of business is so
+managed as to make any serious discussion impossible?
+The strongest expressions of discontent come from the
+French Prelates, they feel how undignified, not to say
+ridiculous, is the <foreign rend='italic'>rôle</foreign> assigned to them,&mdash;of saying
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> to ready-made decrees&mdash;even more keenly than
+the Germans, who are also greatly disgusted. Attempts
+to protest against this oppressive code in the Congregation
+were suppressed by the declaration of the President,
+Cardinal de Luca, that the Pope had so ordained, and
+no discussion could be allowed on the subject. He
+would allow neither the courageous Bishop Strossmayer
+nor Archbishop Darboy to say a word on these intolerable
+restrictions. The whole scene made a profound
+impression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On December 14 the two parties measured their
+strength and organization in electing the twenty-four
+members for the Commission <hi rend='italic'>de Fide</hi>, which is, of
+course, the most important of all. The Liberals were
+completely overmatched, and, notwithstanding their
+200 votes, not indeed properly combined, failed to carry
+one of their candidates. Neither Dupanloup nor
+Hefele could be brought in. A list of names to be
+<pb n='093'/><anchor id='Pg093'/>
+voted for from the Propaganda was handed to every
+trusted partisan; the Italians and Spaniards were also
+furnished with one, and so all the Infallibilist leaders
+appear on the list of the Committee, Manning and
+Deschamps, Martin and Senestrey, Pie of Poitiers,
+Reynier of Cambray, then some Italians, Spaniards, and
+South Americans,&mdash;these therefore are the flower of
+theological learning among the Bishops. One of these
+men they must keep their eye fixed on, for he seems
+called to take a place of supreme importance and honour
+in this Council, and if all goes well, will certainly
+be counted with the heroes of ancient Councils, Athanasius,
+Cyril, and Augustine. This is Mgr. Cardoni,
+Archbishop of Edessa, Secretary to the Congregation
+for examining Bishops, Consultor of several other Congregations,
+theologian of the Dataria, and President of
+the Ecclesiastical Academy. Yet this man was not
+long ago a very obscure personage, even in Rome, but
+as First Consultor of the Preparatory Commission of
+Dogmas, he composed the report or <hi rend='italic'>Votum</hi> of forty
+pages on Papal Infallibility. This is now printed
+and distributed, and serves as the basis for the discussion
+on the subject to be introduced in Council. Cardoni
+himself, as reporter, will discharge the necessary
+<pb n='094'/><anchor id='Pg094'/>
+offices of midwife at the birth of the new dogma; he
+will have the last word if any doubts or objections are
+raised, and then at least 500 votes will proclaim at
+once the Infallibility of the Pope and the triumph of
+the greatest and most fortunate of Roman theologians.
+Cardoni will immediately be made Cardinal; as he brings
+this Divine gift to the Pope, he will himself partake in
+the enjoyment of what is so much indebted to him, and
+will reap the harvest of his labours.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='095'/><anchor id='Pg095'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fourth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Dec. 20, 1869.</hi>&mdash;It may truly be said that
+theology is now rare, very rare, in Rome. There is, of
+course, no lack of theologians; the Pope himself has no
+less than a hundred, chiefly monks; but if they were
+all pounded together in a mortar into one theologian,
+even this one would find some difficulty in getting his
+claims recognised in Germany. If any one here were
+to demand of the so-called theologians what, between
+the North Sea and the Alps, is considered the first
+requisite for a theologian,&mdash;the capacity of reading the
+New Testament and the Greek Fathers and Councils in
+the original language,&mdash;he would be ridiculed as a
+dreamer. And as to the theology of many Bishops,
+one is often reminded of the daughters of Phorcys, who
+had only one eye and one tooth, which they lent each
+other by turns to use. Not a few of them flutter about
+Infallibility like flies about a candle, in evident fear of
+<pb n='096'/><anchor id='Pg096'/>
+getting burnt. But when the critical moment comes,
+they will vote obediently as the master whose power they
+have sworn to increase bids them. If the Prelates were
+even slightly acquainted with Church history, they would
+certainly recoil in terror from the maxims and doctrines
+their decision will recall from the realm of shadows
+they seem to have sunk into, and clothe again with flesh
+and blood. They would recoil from the complications
+and contests they and their successors must hereafter be
+involved in with all nations and governments, as forced
+executors of every infallible utterance of 256 Popes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sudden departure of Cardinal Mathieu, Archbishop
+of Besançon, is connected with the election of
+the Commission on Faith, which turned out so unfortunately
+for the Germans; the French Bishops after the
+previous consultation had divided their forces, the Infallibilists
+voting for Bonnechose, their opponents for
+Cardinal Mathieu. The defeated party wanted to protest
+against a scandalous intrigue about the election,
+carried on by a man whose name I suppress; and Mathieu's
+sudden departure was in order to avoid being
+mixed up with the conflict, and from disgust at the
+whole affair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A singular incident not long since created some
+<pb n='097'/><anchor id='Pg097'/>
+sensation and amusement in English circles. The
+English Bishops, like their Archbishop, Manning, are
+declared Infallibilists&mdash;a tendency first introduced
+among the clergy there since Wiseman's time, for
+before that Gallican views prevailed almost universally
+in England, and definite assurances were given on
+the subject at the time of Catholic Emancipation.
+And as Papal Infallibility implied necessarily the
+doctrine of the Pope's dominion over monarchs and
+governments, which was formally abjured&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, in the
+Irish clerical seminary of Maynooth&mdash;the Infallibilist
+theory was supposed to be shelved also. It chanced that
+lately the <hi rend='italic'>Pall Mall Gazette</hi>, which is much read even
+here, under the heading, <q>The Infallibility of the Pope
+a Protestant Invention,</q> quoted the following question
+and answer from a widely-used manual of instruction,
+approved by many Bishops, and highly praised even in
+Manning's journal, the <hi rend='italic'>Tablet</hi>, called <hi rend='italic'>The Controversial
+Catechism</hi>:&mdash;<q><hi rend='italic'>Q.</hi> Are not Catholics bound to believe
+that the Pope is in himself infallible?&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>A.</hi> This is a
+Protestant invention, and is no article of Catholic
+belief; no Papal decision can bind under pain of
+heresy, unless received and prescribed by the teaching
+body, the Bishops of the Church.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='098'/><anchor id='Pg098'/>
+
+<p>
+At the moment I am writing, there is a pause, but
+by no means a truce. <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>Le Concile ne marche pas, mais il
+intrigue</foreign>, I heard a Frenchman say this morning. The
+acoustic qualities of the Assembly Hall, which is the
+whole height of St. Peter's, make it quite unfit for use.
+If anything is to be proclaimed, it must be shouted at
+full pitch to the four sides. It happened the other
+day that the Bishops on one side were crying <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>,
+while those on the other side expressed their opinion by
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet, quia nihil intelleximus</foreign>. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>, who was
+long ago made aware of the state of the case, really
+thought that all discussion was superfluous. And as the
+hall must be abandoned as utterly useless, the 120,000
+scudi lavished on preparing it are wasted. There is no
+lack of funds, however; so much so, that 20,000 scudi
+have been spent already on laying the foundation of
+the memorial pillar of the Council. These things must
+make an indescribable impression on those who have
+heard most touching pictures drawn in the pulpit at
+home of the wants and poverty of the Head of the
+Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Antonelli, to whom the impossibility of carrying on
+the Council in this place has been represented, has now
+taken the matter in hand, and another chamber is to be
+<pb n='099'/><anchor id='Pg099'/>
+found and got ready. A room in the Quirinal is talked
+of, or the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>atrium</foreign> over St. Peter's in the Sistine. The
+latter would be an ominous place, for in the <hi rend='italic'>Sala
+Regia</hi>, which the Bishops must pass through to enter
+the Sistine, is Vasari's famous picture, painted by order
+of Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiii.</hi>, for the glorification of the massacre of
+St. Bartholomew. The contemplation of this picture,
+which now, since the publication of the nuncio Salviati's
+despatches, the Pope is proved to have ordered with
+full knowledge of the real nature of that horrible
+occurrence, and full intention of sanctioning it, might
+perhaps somewhat indispose the Prelates to vote for the
+articles of the Syllabus on religious coercion and the
+power of the Church to inflict bodily punishment.
+Antonelli means now to take up the Council in earnest.
+For him, indeed, who was formerly an advocate, the
+theological side of Infallibility has little interest; but
+he is too skilful and experienced a statesman and
+financier not to appreciate keenly the gain to be derived
+from the new dogma in all countries, in the shape
+of power, influence, and revenue. He understands well
+enough, and better than many statesmen this side the
+Alps, the incalculable consequences of having it henceforth
+taught and insisted on as a first principle in
+<pb n='100'/><anchor id='Pg100'/>
+every catechism, public school, and country pulpit, that
+Papal decrees and decisions, not only in the domain of
+faith but of morals, the relations of Church and State,
+and the whole life of society, are absolutely infallible,&mdash;of
+its being made the first and crucial question for
+Catholics in all cases, What has the infallible Pope,
+either the reigning pontiff or one of his predecessors,
+decided on this point, or what will he decide if
+asked?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Bull appeared yesterday, which, if read and understood,
+would create great excitement. It professes to
+abolish a part of the numerous excommunications <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>latæ
+sententiæ</foreign>,<note place='foot'>Excommunications <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>latæ sententiæ</foreign>, as distinguished from excommunication
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ferendæ sententiæ</foreign>, are those which immediately take effect on the
+commission of the forbidden act, without requiring any sentence of Pope
+or Bishop to be pronounced.</note> which the Popes have gradually accumulated;
+but virtually it is intended as a renewal or confirmation
+of the Bull <hi rend='italic'>In Cœnâ Domini</hi>, which Clement
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi> (Ganganelli) first dropped the custom of publishing
+annually, and which, from his time, had been
+regarded, everywhere out of Rome, as abrogated, though
+the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> always maintained that it was binding in
+principle, as Crétineau-Joli shows in his Memoirs of
+Consalvi. I am only giving here the judgment of a
+<pb n='101'/><anchor id='Pg101'/>
+friend who has read the Bull. If he is rightly informed,
+it is but the first link in a chain of decrees embodying
+the retrospective force of the anticipated dogma,
+for the saying will hold good then, <q>Quod fuimus erimus,
+quod fecimus faciemus.</q> Every claim once advanced
+must be maintained, every doctrinal proposition
+renewed, and so the living body will be chained to a
+corpse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Desertions from the ranks of the Opposition to the
+majority of 500, must, no doubt, be reckoned on, and
+the renegades will say, like Talleyrand, that they are
+not deserting, but only coming in earlier than others.
+Whether these desertions will be numerous enough to
+reduce the minority to 40 or 50, as the authorities
+hope, will be determined when the question of opportuneness
+gets disentangled from the question of principle.
+For it requires more than common courage to
+make open profession of disbelief in the Infallibilist
+dogma at Rome, since the Pope, in his letters to Manning
+and Deschamps, has indulged in severe censures
+of those who question his infallibility; and every
+Cardinal and Monsignore is accustomed to express
+himself in the same sense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Can this Council, then, which can move neither hand
+<pb n='102'/><anchor id='Pg102'/>
+nor foot, be called free? Is an assembly free, when
+no speech can be made, no single decision come to,
+without the express permission of an external master?
+If this is freedom, there has never been an unfree
+Council. So I hear many saying, as well clergy as
+laity, and even Bishops. The Pope, of course, has not
+forgotten that, on the day of his election, sitting on the
+High Altar of that very church where the Council is
+now being held, he was adored by the Cardinals, and
+four days afterwards crowned with the triple tiara, with
+the words, <q>Scias te esse rectorem orbis.</q> It has been
+summoned to arrange and negotiate the transition from
+the previous condition of the Church to a new one.
+Till now, at least in theory, Councils were, or were
+supposed to be, assemblies deliberating and deciding
+freely. But, in the new condition of the Church, under
+the rule of Papal Infallibility, assemblies of Bishops
+are purely superfluous, or only useful as machines for
+acclamation. The present assembly stands midway
+between the old Church and the new, and participates
+in both. The vital breath of freedom and independence
+it is deprived of, but it is not yet a mere acclamation-machine:
+it can still dissent and say, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>. On
+the day when the new dogma is proclaimed, and the
+<pb n='103'/><anchor id='Pg103'/>
+eternal city again, as in 1517,<note place='foot'>When the news arrived from Paris of the abolition of the Pragmatic
+Sanction, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, of the reforms of Basle.</note> declares its joy by
+illuminations, the Synod will have killed itself with its
+own hand, and marched into the grave as the last
+of its generation. And just as when a knight died
+the last of his race, his shield was broken and his arms
+obliterated, so will the usual chapter <hi rend='italic'>De Conciliis</hi> be
+obliterated from the dogmatic manuals.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='104'/><anchor id='Pg104'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Dec. 23, 1869.</hi>&mdash;The Council is suspended for
+a while, for want of an available place of meeting, or is
+occupied only in studying the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> that have been
+distributed at home, and deliberating in different sections.
+The German Bishops have resolved to address a
+memorial to the Pope, protesting against being put into
+a strait-waistcoat by the regulations for the order of
+business, and claiming the right of proposing motions
+freely. They think it intolerable that every proposal,
+wish, or motion should have first to be examined, revised,
+and mutilated or changed at their pleasure by two
+Commissions, before it can even come on for discussion.
+And how are these two Commissions composed? Of
+course, the eight German Bishops who have already
+separated themselves from their countrymen, and prefer
+to associate with Spaniards and South Americans, hold
+aloof from this proceeding too. If I am correctly informed,
+<pb n='105'/><anchor id='Pg105'/>
+a similar memorial has been handed in from
+the French Bishops; it was, at least, being circulated
+for signature during the last few days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You will have received, or found in the French and
+English papers, the Bull of Excommunications I mentioned
+in my last. As I said before, it is a re-issue of
+the Bull <hi rend='italic'>In Cænâ Domini</hi>. Certain excommunications
+nobody paid any attention to are dropped out, as, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>,
+of sovereigns and governments who levy taxes without
+permission of the Pope. But new censures of wide
+application have come into their place. In reading
+the Bull, one feels as if one had got into the thick of a
+tempest, so fierce and frequent are the lightning-flashes
+of the Vatican ban, darting and burning in all directions.
+If they were to be treated seriously, there
+would not be many houses in the cities of Europe that
+would not be struck. The Bishops are hit hard; one
+unpleasant surprise follows on another. While they are
+considering how to secure a minimum of freedom in
+the Council, they are suddenly overwhelmed with a hailstorm
+of excommunications, many of which are directly
+aimed at themselves, but all of which are to be administered
+and executed by them and their clergy.
+They are summoned to Rome, and hardly have they got
+<pb n='106'/><anchor id='Pg106'/>
+there when this Bull of anathemas, drawn up without
+their knowledge or participation, and which thrusts the
+souls intrusted to them by thousands out of the
+Church, is sent to them; and the whole burden of it,
+with all its endless consequences and complications, is
+laid on their shoulders. They seem intended to drain
+the cup of humiliation to the dregs. The only persons
+pleased with the Bull, as far as I can see, are the
+Jesuits, who are in the very best spirits here in Rome,
+and see both present and future in the most rosy hues.
+The view of the pious Bishops is simple and unanimous:
+the more excommunications, so many more reserved
+cases and perplexed and tormented consciences.
+But the confessionals of the Jesuits will be doubly
+thronged, who are furnished with all sorts of plenary
+powers of absolution, and are thus made indispensable,
+and placed in a very superior position to the secular
+clergy. Moreover, the Bishops are deprived of the
+power of absolving from these censures. So each of
+these multiplied excommunications is worth its weight
+in gold to the Order, and helps to build Colleges and
+Professed Houses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Bull containing directions in the event of the
+Pope's death occurring during the Council was not
+<pb n='107'/><anchor id='Pg107'/>
+issued by Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> from any real anxiety to provide
+for such an occurrence,&mdash;for he enjoys the best health,
+and in all probability will falsify the old proverb, <q>Non
+numerabis annos Petri.</q><note place='foot'>[This formula, often mistakenly supposed to occur in the Papal
+Coronation service, refers to the traditional length of St. Peter's pontificate&mdash;twenty-five
+years. No Pope has yet reigned to the end of his twenty-fifth
+year, and only one has entered on the beginning of it. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> completes
+his twenty-fourth year on June 16, 1870.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> No one really supposed the
+Council would claim the right of electing in Conclave,
+as occurred once under totally different circumstances,
+after the deposition of a Pope (John <hi rend='smallcaps'>xxiii.</hi>) at Constance.
+The real point of the document lies in the
+declaration that the Council is to be at once dissolved
+on the Pope's death, as a corpse from which the soul
+has departed. And this is a decisive intimation of the
+relations not only of the dead but of the living Pope to
+the Council. The Bull might be summed up in the
+words, <q>Without me you are nothing, and against me
+and my will you can do nothing.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The opposition of German and French Bishops to the
+new dogma was more or less anticipated here; what
+was not expected was that the Orientals, numbering
+about sixty, and the North American Bishops, would
+pronounce against it. The former declare openly that
+no surer means could be found to throw back their
+<pb n='108'/><anchor id='Pg108'/>
+Churches into schism, and place them under the holy
+Synod in St. Petersburg or the Patriarch in Stamboul.
+The Americans ask how they are to live under the free
+Constitutions of their Republic, and maintain their position
+of equality with their (Protestant) fellow-citizens,
+after committing themselves to the principles attested
+by Papal Infallibility, such as religious persecution and
+the coercive power of the Church, the claim of Catholicism
+to exclusive mastery in the State, the Pope's
+right to dispense from oaths, the subjection of the civil
+power to his supreme dominion, etc. The inevitable
+result would be that Catholics would be looked upon
+and treated as pariahs in the United States, that all
+religious parties would be banded together against them
+as common enemies, and would endeavour, as far as
+possible, to exclude them from public offices. One of
+the American Bishops lately said, <q>Nobody should be
+elected Pope who has not lived three years in the
+United States, and thus learnt to comprehend what is
+possible at this day in a freely governed Commonwealth.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But even in the apparently compact and admirably
+organized mass of the 500 Infallibilists, softly whispered
+doubts are beginning to be heard here and there.
+<pb n='109'/><anchor id='Pg109'/>
+Before the eyes of some of these devoted Prelates
+hovers a pale and warning ghost, called exclusion of the
+clergy and of Catholic instruction from the public
+schools. It would indeed be impossible to put more
+effective weapons into the hands of the powerful and
+increasing party who are aiming at this, than by giving
+its due prominence henceforth in all Catechisms to the
+supreme article of faith of Papal Infallibility, with some
+of its consequences expressed, and others left to be
+orally supplied by the teacher, so that boys and girls
+would be trained in full knowledge of the glaring contradiction
+between religion and the order of the State,
+the Church and the Constitution of their country.<note place='foot'>[This point is forcibly dwelt on by Count Daru in his memorandum,
+which the Pope refused to lay before the Council.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> A
+Belgian layman here assured me yesterday that the
+result of the new dogma in his country would be a
+powerful movement against the position of the clergy
+in the primary schools; the gymnasia and middle
+schools they have lost already. One of the Belgian
+Bishops even is said to begin to be troubled with these
+apprehensions. And now a cry of distress is rising
+from England. The National Education League has
+published its programme for a system of compulsory
+<pb n='110'/><anchor id='Pg110'/>
+education of the people, excluding all denominational
+teaching, and only allowing the Bible for religious
+reading. The English Bishops now in Rome, who are
+fanatical for the new dogma, may ask themselves if on
+their return home they could make a more acceptable
+present to the Committee of this already very powerful
+League than by issuing a corrected Catechism, enriched
+with the new article of faith. A penny edition of it
+would bring in hundreds of thousands of members to
+the League, and admirably further the design it now
+openly proclaims of <q>absorbing in a friendly way</q> the
+schools already existing.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='111'/><anchor id='Pg111'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Dec. 24, 1869.</hi>&mdash;The first part of a tolerably
+comprehensive document, or <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, has been distributed,
+it is said, to the Bishops, <q>sub secreto pontificio,</q>
+and no less than seventeen parts equally comprehensive
+are to follow. The <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> of a dogmatic constitution
+<hi rend='italic'>contra multiplices errores ex Rationalismo derivatos Patrum
+examini propositum</hi> is a sort of doctrinal compendium,
+divided into chapters, and, as is easily seen,
+is only an amplification of the opening propositions of
+the Syllabus. In this way we shall have the unprecedented
+occurrence of a Papal decree, extending to the
+length of a book, issued with the approval of the Council.
+If it is received and promulgated in this shape, it
+will create astonishment by its wholly unconciliar form.
+It is thrown into a declamatory shape; it indulges in
+complaints and reproaches about the blindness and
+misery of men, who have fallen into so many deadly
+<pb n='112'/><anchor id='Pg112'/>
+errors, even materialism and pantheism; it carries on its
+front the impress of the new Jesuit school, and seems to be
+inspired by the aim of bringing before the contemporary
+world, in their crudest form, all the hardest and most
+offensive principles of particular doctrinal schools, which
+it has hitherto been endeavoured to soften or set aside.
+For the originator of this tractate assures us that the
+aversion of men for such doctrines is only one of the
+poisonous fruits of Rationalism. Here is a characteristic
+specimen. At that Florentine Synod of 1439,
+which bequeathed such painful recollections both to East
+and West, Eugenius <hi rend='smallcaps'>IV.</hi> had it defined <q>that the souls
+of those who die only in original, or in actual mortal
+sin, descend into hell, but are unequally punished.</q><note place='foot'><q>Animas eorum qui in solo peccato originali, vel mortali actuali
+decedunt, in infernum descendere, pœnis tamen disparibus puniendas.</q></note>
+This proposition has sadly tormented theologians, and
+they have devised all sorts of ways of softening or explaining
+it, even assuming the very doubtful authority of
+this Council, which was rejected by the whole Gallican
+Church. For even the most resolute faith recoils in
+horror from the logical inference, that God has created
+the human race in order from generation to generation
+to plunge into hell far the larger portion of mankind,
+<pb n='113'/><anchor id='Pg113'/>
+simply because they have not received the baptism
+which in most cases was never offered them. The vast
+gulf between this proposition and the Scriptural doctrine
+that God is Love, and wills all men to be saved,
+no theologian has undertaken to bridge over. But the
+Roman Jesuit to whom we owe this <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> really thinks
+these are just the doctrines best adapted to cure men
+of this age of the fatal Rationalism they have fallen
+into.<note place='foot'><q>Imprimis itaque fide Catholicâ, tenendum est illorum animas,</q> etc.
+The author seems really to believe that the Rationalistic tendencies of the
+age can be cured with an emetic.</note> This reminds one strongly of Antonelli's saying,
+that these Fathers have a special talent for ruining
+whatever they touch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The death of Cardinal Reisach is considered here an
+irreparable loss, and above all by the Pope himself,
+whose confidence he enjoyed more than any other
+Cardinal. He had the greatest share in preparing the
+propositions laid before the Council, and had he been
+able to make his influence felt, he would certainly have
+given powerful support to the new dogmas. He passed
+here for a man of comprehensive learning and great
+penetration. His friends used to commend his friendly
+and genial nature. For us Germans he was a sort of
+phenomenon, a show specimen of his kind, so to speak.
+<pb n='114'/><anchor id='Pg114'/>
+In him we saw how far a German can go in the process
+of being Italianized, so radically was his whole being
+metamorphosed into that of the Italian <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>prelatura</foreign>, and
+the peculiar circle of thought in which Roman clerics
+and dignitaries move had become a second nature to
+him. What distinguishes a Roman Prelate is, first, that
+liturgical endowment&mdash;that willing absorption in the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>cæremonia</foreign>, as the old Romans partly originated and partly
+borrowed it from the Etruscans&mdash;and next, the faculty
+of calculating quickly and surely what loss or gain in
+power and influence the settlement of any ecclesiastical
+question will bring. Reisach was eminent in both respects.
+No one excelled him in reverence for every line of
+the rubric and every ceremonial detail, as practised here.
+And again, in his dislike for German science, literature,
+and theology, he had become a thorough Italian,
+so that his ignorance of even the most famous intellectual
+products of Germany was quite fabulous. To
+him principally were addressed the denunciations of
+German works not composed exactly to the taste of the
+Roman Jesuits, and it was he who arranged with the
+Congregation of the Index the censures pronounced
+during recent years on the works of learned Germans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus then there is a niche left vacant in the Roman
+<pb n='115'/><anchor id='Pg115'/>
+temple of heroes. Another Reisach will not so easily
+be found; for it is given to very few men to transmute
+their originally single nature into the form of the
+Siamese twins, inhabited by two souls, a German and
+an Italian.<note place='foot'>[Cardinal Reisach, who was formerly Archbishop of Munich, used to
+say he had almost forgotten how to speak German.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> If the vacant Hat is not to be the price of
+desertion from the ranks of the Opposition, but the
+reward of past services, three German Bishops may put
+in a claim for it, Martin, Senestrey, and Fessler. In
+fiery zeal for the good cause, restless activity, and unquestioning
+devotion, they are on a par, and were all
+Germany like-minded with this trio, the great sacrifice&mdash;<q>il
+sacrificio del intelletto</q>&mdash;so variously commended by
+the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, would have long since been accomplished,
+and the Jesuits might hold up the Germans as a model
+for all nations to follow. Meanwhile for the moment
+Fessler occupies the most conspicuous position.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Postscript.</hi>&mdash;I have just learnt that the Pope is not
+disposed to give up his Council Hall in St. Peter's.
+Another attempt to hold a General Congregation there
+is to be made on Tuesday, which can hardly be a success.
+The natural consequence will be that the second
+Solemn Session, announced for January 6, will fall
+<pb n='116'/><anchor id='Pg116'/>
+through from lack of any decrees ready to promulgate.
+The protest of a portion of the French Episcopate
+against the order of business has really been sent in,
+and this has inspired fresh courage into the German
+and Hungarian prelates, who have drawn up a protest
+against the innovations differing so widely from the
+form of the ancient Councils; they dwell especially on
+the violation of the right belonging by Divine institution
+to the Bishops. I need not say that the notorious
+eight&mdash;the Jesuit pupils and the Tyrolese Bishops&mdash;declined
+to join in this proceeding. Meanwhile scruples
+have arisen among the other pupils of the Jesuits, which
+again bring the whole affair into doubt. There is a
+notion among the French of dividing the Council into
+assemblies, formed according to the different languages,
+so as to get over the difficulty or impossibility of carrying
+on a free discussion in Latin. But then it became
+clear at once that, through the number of missionary
+Bishops, and Swiss or Belgians of the Romance tongues,
+the majority would be on the side of the Infallibilist
+party. And the Pope, who hates all these assemblies of
+Bishops, has interposed by causing a sort of standing
+order to be proclaimed, through the curialistic Cardinal
+Bonnechose, that he will allow no meetings of more
+than twenty Bishops.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='117'/><anchor id='Pg117'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Seventh Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Schwarzenberg has been the subject of
+conversation in Rome for the last few days. He is said
+to have formally gone over to the Infallibilist camp,
+and the report will no doubt make the round of Europe.
+But it is not true, and he himself declares, notwithstanding
+appearances, that he has not changed, and does not
+mean to change, his attitude and mind. The circumstance
+which has given occasion to the rumour is as
+follows:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a combined meeting of German and Hungarian
+Bishops, it was resolved, on Haynald's motion, to request
+of the Pope a better representation, and one more accordant
+with the dignity of the two Churches, on the
+Commissions. It was hoped that a majority of the
+French and a considerable number of the North American
+and Oriental Bishops, and even some Spanish
+and Italian Prelates, would join in this step. For
+<pb n='118'/><anchor id='Pg118'/>
+Haynald's object was to propose that the whole assembly
+should be divided into eight national groups,
+and that each of these <q>eight nations</q> should be
+entitled to have two or three members, elected from its
+own body,&mdash;some sixteen or twenty-four in all&mdash;added
+to the four elected Commissions, and to the Commission
+nominated by the Pope for examining all motions proposed.
+This, it was thought, would secure a counterpoise
+to the skilfully disciplined majority which was
+crushing out all opposition. For it has already become
+evident that the strength of the Romanist party lies in
+the number of titular Bishops selected by the Pope, and
+Vicars-Apostolic or missionary Bishops; in persons,
+that is, who, having no flocks, or only having them in
+expectation, represent in fact nothing and nobody, and
+can therefore bear no testimony to the faith of their
+Churches, which have no existence. The Germans were
+greatly elated by this project; they admired and congratulated
+themselves on having shown so much spirit,
+and daring to tell the Pope something widely different
+from the assurance that they were ready to die in
+absolute subjection to him. Hereupon Schwarzenberg
+came forward to declare that he would not sign the
+petition, as he did not choose to compromise himself
+<pb n='119'/><anchor id='Pg119'/>
+further with the Pope, and Rauscher of Vienna, and
+Tarnóczy of Salzburg, sided with him. This caused great
+consternation, and at the first moment many thought
+it betokened an entire apostasy, and that in Schwarzenberg's
+case the Cardinal had triumphed over the
+German. But he has so emphatically denied this that
+he must be believed. It is very conceivable that
+Schwarzenberg, seeing more deeply into the situation at
+Rome, was led by grounds of expediency to take this
+course; possibly the mere wish to make as sparing
+use as they could of the fund of high spirit and courage
+brought from Germany, and the fear of using it up too
+quickly, in case the Council should last some time, may
+have determined the three Prelates to decline subscribing.
+Already a new demand has been made upon
+the Bishops, to adopt the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> the Pope had intrusted
+the preparation of to the Jesuits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The contest over this <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> has begun in good earnest,
+according to the impression made by the General
+Congregation held yesterday, Dec. 28. The first part of
+the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> was the one the speakers dwelt on,&mdash;as far,
+that is, as they could be heard, for the acoustic uselessness
+of the hall makes itself felt before and behind, and
+the pulpit had to be carried about all round the room
+<pb n='120'/><anchor id='Pg120'/>
+before the right position could be hit upon for it.
+Meanwhile it had transpired, who were the authors of the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> which the Pope meant to promulgate, <q>with the
+approbation of the Council,</q> as a binding rule of faith.
+They were two German Jesuits, Schrader, and another,
+either Franzelin or Kleutgen. It is remembered how,
+a year ago, a great deal was made in the newspapers of
+distinguished German scholars having been summoned
+to Rome for the preliminary labours of the Council. If
+several of the names mentioned created surprise from
+their obscurity, it gave satisfaction to find among those
+invited men like Hefele and Haneberg. It is now clear
+that every work of real importance was intrusted to
+other hands, chiefly to the Jesuits, while Hefele was
+summoned to Rome to extract the ceremonial from the
+Acts of the Council of Trent, after which he was dismissed,
+and Haneberg was commissioned to prepare a
+report on Eastern monasteries. Schrader has become
+notorious as the advocate of the extremest Papal
+system by his book <hi rend='italic'>De Unitate Romanâ Commentarius</hi>,
+where he treats all episcopal authority as a mere
+emanation of the Papal. According to him, every article
+of the Syllabus is to be so understood that the contradictory
+statement contains the true doctrine. It was
+<pb n='121'/><anchor id='Pg121'/>
+therefore with very good reason that he was chosen out
+to draw up the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, or, in other words, to fabricate a
+second strait-waistcoat for theology, after the Council
+had already been put into one in the regulations for the
+order of business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> has aroused manifold displeasure, even
+among allies of Schrader and his brethren, and men
+who, like them, are Infallibilists. What I hear said
+everywhere is that the whole thing is a poor and very
+superficial piece of patchwork, with more words than
+ideas, and, as the blind old Archbishop Tizzani said in
+the Congregation, is above all designed to stamp the
+opinions of the Jesuit school as dogmas, and to substitute
+a string of new obligatory articles of faith for the
+<foreign lang='el' rend='italic'>theologumena</foreign> or doctrines of the theological schools
+hitherto left open to the judgment of individuals. For
+a Society, like that of Loyola's disciples, it is of
+supreme importance to possess in the multitude of new
+anathemas what will always supply abundant matter
+for accusations; it appertains to their <q>arcana dominationis</q>
+always to keep alive the fear of being charged
+with heresy. It makes other theologians dependent on
+the Order, and cramps their literary energies. And it
+must be borne in mind that there are no longer any
+<pb n='122'/><anchor id='Pg122'/>
+powerful theological corporations which might meet the
+Jesuits on equal terms. Were the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> to be
+adopted, very few professors of Old Testament Exegesis
+could escape the charge of heresy, so far is the inspiration
+of the scriptural books, even the deutero-canonical,
+extended here for the first time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus it happened yesterday that there was no
+single speaker for the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, but all, beginning with Cardinal
+Rauscher, spoke against it; and Archbishop Conolly
+of Halifax said in so many words, <q>Censeo <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> cum
+honore esse sepeliendum.</q> This of course has only
+been the beginning of the discussion, and we are naturally
+in suspense as to how it will proceed. But so
+much is already gained, that a spirit of independence
+is roused among the Bishops. Much is said here about
+the desertion of certain Bishops from the ranks of the
+Opposition, and new names are mentioned every morning,
+often with the remark that So-and-so has let himself
+be caught with the bait of one of the fifteen vacant
+Hats. These Hats are held here to be capable of working
+miracles. There is thought to be no more effective
+means of working the conversion of a hardened anti-Infallibilist
+than a decoration of that kind, and, in truth,
+the number might not be great of those who would say
+<pb n='123'/><anchor id='Pg123'/>
+with Darboy, <q>Je n'ai point de rhumer de cerveau, je
+n'ai pas besoin de chapeau.</q> As long as fifteen of these
+Hats are suspended in the air ready to descend on a willing
+head, so long, every Italian is convinced, there can be
+no lack of conversions. The example of the Synod of
+Constantinople in 859 is quoted, where the Bishops were
+induced to vote for the deposition of Synesius by promising
+each of them separately the Patriarchal throne.
+Yet of the majority of French, German, Hungarian, and
+American Bishops, no one who knows them would
+expect this weakness; and so on closer inspection these
+rumours come to nothing. Even Ketteler, who had
+been given up for lost on account of his intimate relations
+with the Jesuits,&mdash;he lives in the German College&mdash;shows
+himself firm, and the most important personage
+who as yet has deceived the expectations formed of
+him is Cardinal Bonnechose, Archbishop of Rouen.
+It is stated in German circles that fifteen Spanish
+Bishops are wavering, and show a disposition to join
+the Opposition. The apprehension that the other
+party, whose admirable organization and adroitness in
+manœuvring deserves the highest praise, will carry
+through Infallibility by a <foreign rend='italic'>coup</foreign> still survives, and only
+yesterday several Bishops entered the Council Hall in
+<pb n='124'/><anchor id='Pg124'/>
+dread of being taken by surprise by the acclamation.
+Cardinal di Pietro says it is no longer possible to drop
+the affair; things have gone too far already.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I understand the feeling of the Roman clergy, and
+their indignation at these stubborn Hyperboreans. It
+is as though one wanted to snatch from the hands of
+the thirsty wanderer, who, after long toil, had at length
+reached the fountain, the cup he was raising to his lips.
+With Infallibility, as it is now defined and made clear
+as the sun at noonday by the Jesuits, all resistance is
+broken, every attack triumphantly parried, every end
+brought within reach. If the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> once becomes by
+this means the horny Siegfried, no vulnerable point
+even in the back will be left. The Jesuit Schrader,
+in his book on Roman unity, has proved that every
+act and every ordinance of the Pope is infallible.
+For, as he says, <q>all Papal measures, as regards
+their truth, belong to the order of faith, or morals,
+or law. All decrees, whatever their subject, always
+contain a true doctrine, whether speculative, moral,
+or juridical. But the Pope is infallible in the order
+of truth and doctrine, and therefore in all his decrees.</q>
+Your readers will believe I am ridiculing or
+calumniating the valiant Jesuit, who shines at present
+<pb n='125'/><anchor id='Pg125'/>
+as a star of the first magnitude in the theological
+heavens of Rome; but I have only given a faithful
+translation, as any one may ascertain for himself. That
+is the logic which prevails here, and which no Roman
+cleric doubts to be of triumphant force.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Dec. 30.</hi>&mdash;The second Session of the General Congregation
+on the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> took place yesterday. About a
+third of the hall had been cut off by a partition, so that
+the speakers could be somewhat better understood.
+Among the five speakers, who, like the seven that had
+preceded them, pronounced for the rejection of the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, Strossmayer, and Ginoulbiac, of Grenoble, who is
+considered the best theologian among the French Bishops,
+commanded most attention. The <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> was again
+censured for going much too far in its statements and
+condemnations, and it was shown that the Council, by
+accepting it, would enter on a wholly new path, widely
+different from that of the earlier Councils, where the
+Church would be forced into constantly narrower definitions,
+until a complete dogmatic philosophy, stiff and
+rigid, had been formalized. Strossmayer also observed
+on the formula of promulgation selected by Pius, which
+represents the Pope as a dogmatic lawgiver, and the
+Council as a mere consultative body called in to assist
+<pb n='126'/><anchor id='Pg126'/>
+him, that it is an unheard-of innovation, departing from
+all conciliar traditions. This led to an opposite statement
+by Cardinal Capalti, one of the Presidents, and
+a reply from Strossmayer. As yet no single one of
+the host of 500 has said a word in defence of the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>. The excitement is, as may be conceived,
+great. That even Rauscher came forward against the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> created the more sensation, as it was he who
+brought its author, Schrader, to the University of
+Vienna.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='127'/><anchor id='Pg127'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Eighth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Jan. 8, 1870.</hi>&mdash;One month is now gone by
+without any result, or, as many here say, simply wasted.
+The first real Session, on January 6, went off without any
+single decree being published. It has produced a very
+painful impression generally, that, for the obvious purpose
+of something to do, the unmeaning ceremony has
+been adopted of swearing to the profession of faith
+which every Prelate had already sworn to at his
+ordination and at other times. The question was inevitably
+forced on men's minds whether this profusion
+of superfluous swearings, in an assembly of men on
+whose orthodoxy no shadow of suspicion had been cast,
+was at all fitting or reconcilable with the Scriptural
+prohibition of needless oaths. But the Session had been
+announced, and the Opposition Bishops, contrary to
+expectation, had found a great deal to censure in the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> in general and in detail, so that in four General
+<pb n='128'/><anchor id='Pg128'/>
+Congregations nothing had been effected. The simplest
+plan would have been to defer the Session, and anywhere
+else that course would have been followed. But
+in Rome? That would have been a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>de facto</foreign> confession
+of having made a mistake, and it is here a first principle
+that the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> is always right. So they had 747
+oaths taken, and thus the Solemn Session was held.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is exceedingly convenient to have to deal with a
+majority of 600 Prelates, who are simply your creatures,
+obedient to every hint, and admirably disciplined.
+Three hundred of them are still further bound to Pius
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> by a special tie, for they are indebted to him, as the
+<hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> of January 1 reminded them, for both food and
+lodging, <q>sono da lui alloggiati e sostentati e assistiti in
+tutto il bisognevole alla vita.</q> Nor does that journal
+fail to point to the extreme poverty of many of the
+Bishops or Vicars-Apostolic, drawn hither from Asia,
+Africa, and Australia; even among the European
+Bishops it calls many <q>poverissimi.</q> Who has paid
+their travelling expenses, it says not. The <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> may
+be easy; none of them will swell the ranks of the
+Opposition, or attack the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, or refuse their votes
+and acclamations to the infallibility of their benefactor.
+And then the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> has another powerful factor to
+<pb n='129'/><anchor id='Pg129'/>
+rely upon; it says, and confirms what it says by the
+words used by the Pope at the Centenary, June 27,
+1867, that from the tomb of St. Peter issues a secret
+force, which inspires the Bishops with a bold and enterprising
+spirit and great-hearted decisions. If I rightly
+understand the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, it means that for many Bishops
+it is a risk, and requires a lofty courage, to vote for
+Papal Infallibility here in Rome, while the clergy and
+laity of their own dioceses, excepting a few old women of
+either sex, never hitherto knew, or wished to know, anything
+of this Infallibility, and the prevalent belief has
+always been that the business of Bishops at a Council
+was only to bear witness to the faith and tradition of
+their Churches, not to construct new dogmas strange to
+the minds of their flocks. <q>Nous avons changé tout
+cela,</q> thinks the Roman journal, and therefore is the
+Council held in St. Peter's, and not in the Lateran, that
+the <q>secret force</q> may take full effect. Certainly there
+is no lack of secret forces here, They are in full
+activity; there is an address being hawked about, praying
+the Pope to take up the Infallibility question at
+once, and put the Council in a position to vote upon it.
+This time the movement originated with two German
+Bishops, Martin of Paderborn and Senestrey of Regensburg.
+<pb n='130'/><anchor id='Pg130'/>
+Slender causes and great effects! When the
+pond is full, a couple of moles can produce a flood by
+working their way through the dam. Both of these
+men have become perceptibly impatient at the obstinate
+and rebellious disposition of their German and Austrian
+colleagues, and are seeking to hasten the day, when,
+with the new dogma in their hands, they may triumph
+as willing believers over the forced belief of their
+brethren, only converted at the last moment. The
+address seems to have flashed suddenly upon the world,
+for&mdash;so said Mermillod and the rest of the initiated&mdash;its
+very existence was hardly known of; and it had
+500 signatures. It was not shown to Bishops of
+notoriously anti-Infallibilist sentiments, but no labour is
+spared with the doubtful, and others who have not yet
+declared themselves, so that it is quite possible 600
+signatures may be scraped together. Papal Infallibility
+is here limited to cases where the Pope addresses his
+dogmatic decision to the whole Catholic Church.<note place='foot'><q>Supremam ideoque ab errore immunem esse Romani Pontificis auctoritatem,
+quum in rebus fidei et moram ea statuit ac præcipit quæ ab omnibus
+Christi fidelibus credenda et tenenda, quæve rejicienda et damnanda
+sunt.</q></note> That
+was Bellarmine's view, and it would certainly offer many
+advantages; for all difficulties and objections drawn
+<pb n='131'/><anchor id='Pg131'/>
+from the first twelve centuries of Church history would
+be cut off at a stroke, as it is notorious that no Pope
+during that entire period addressed any decree on
+matters of faith to the whole Church. The idea never
+occurred even to a Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi> or Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> or Innocent
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> The two last only issued decrees at the
+head and in the name of General Councils. Boniface
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>, in 1302, was the first who in the title addressed
+his Bull <hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi> to the whole Christian world.
+This Bull therefore, which makes the Pope king of
+kings and sole lord in political as in religious matters,
+would indeed be covered with the shield of Infallibility,
+and we should have a firm and immoveable
+foundation for the policy and civil law both of the present
+and the future. At the same time the various hypotheses
+and attempted denials rendered necessary by the case of
+Pope Honorious would be got rid of at one blow. Only
+this little difficulty would remain: how it came to pass
+that the Popes, who only needed to prefix the word
+<q>Orbi,</q> or <q>Ecclesiæ Catholicæ,</q> to their decrees, in
+order to make them infallible and unassailable, so
+persistently despised this simple means, and thereby
+tolerated or produced so much uncertainty in the
+world? All their decrees before 1302, and most of
+<pb n='132'/><anchor id='Pg132'/>
+them since, are addressed to particular individuals or
+corporations, and therefore fallible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The question now is, whether the minority of some
+200 Prelates have spirit and harmony enough for a
+counter-address. On this thread the fate of the
+Catholic Church seems to hang. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> says, <q>As to
+Infallibility, I believed it as plain Abbé Mastai, and
+now, as Pope Mastai, I <emph>feel</emph> it.</q><note place='foot'><q>Per l'infallibilità, essendo l'Abbate Mastai, l'ho sempre creduto,
+adesso, essendo Papa Mastai, la sento.</q></note> He could therefore
+give us the best information, if he <q>feels</q> his infallibility,
+as to whether he only feels it when he signs a
+decree addressed to the whole Church, or also whenever
+his dogmatic anathemas, of which we possess such an
+abundance, are addressed to a single Bishop or national
+Church only. Meanwhile, if that large section of the
+Infallibilists who are fanatical get the upper hand,
+no distinctions will be admitted; the matter will be
+settled straight off by acclamation, and the Pope will
+be simply told, <q>Thou alone art always inspired by the
+Holy Ghost, whether speaking to all, to many, or to
+one, and every word of thine is for us the command of
+God.</q> Others naturally opine that the matter cannot
+be so easily arranged, but that the question must be
+<pb n='133'/><anchor id='Pg133'/>
+taken up in good earnest and sifted to the bottom, that
+it may be demonstrated to the whole world that Infallibility
+admits of historical illustration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a conversation which took place to-day between
+two leading men of the opposite parties, a Belgian and
+a Frenchman, the former said, <q>Je veux que l'on discute
+à fond tous les textes et tous les faits.</q> The Frenchman
+answered, <q>Je souffre de penser que le Saint Siége va
+être discuté et disséqué de la sorte!</q> That is, in truth,
+a serious anxiety. To begin with, no discussion among
+the Fathers can be dreamt of so long as the Council
+Hall in St. Peter's is kept to, for the speeches made
+there already for the most part were not understood
+at all, or only by very few. What is heard is waves
+of sound, not words and sentences. But even if at
+last a room better suited for human voices and ears is
+found, the question of Infallibility would never be
+submitted to a regular and really free discussion. How
+would the Romance majority of Spaniards and Italians,
+who are the slaves of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> but the masters of
+the Council, and whose whole intellectual outfit is
+based on the scholasticism of the seminaries&mdash;how
+would they receive it, if an audacious German or
+Frenchman were to throw the light of history and
+<pb n='134'/><anchor id='Pg134'/>
+criticism on the rambling Infallibilist evidences of, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>,
+a Perrone? What scenes should we witness! The
+offenders would be reduced to silence, not only by the
+throats but the feet of the majority.<note place='foot'>[This reads almost like a prophecy, when we remember how afterwards,
+and on slighter provocation than is here supposed, hundreds of the Infallibilist
+Bishops danced like maniacs round the pulpit when Strossmayer and
+Schwarzenberg were speaking, yelling and shaking their fists at them.&mdash;Cf.
+<hi rend='italic'>infr.</hi> Letter <ref target='Letter_XXXII'>xxxii</ref>.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> Either the discussion
+will be broken off, when it is begun, or it will never
+be allowed to begin. And therefore so many favour the
+plan of acclamation; and it is related how Archbishop
+Darboy assured the Cardinal de Luca that such an
+attempt would be followed by the immediate departure
+and protest of a number of Bishops.<note place='foot'>[Archbishop Darboy's interposition stopped the conspiracy being
+carried out at the first General Congregation, and four American Bishops
+disconcerted a second similar plot on St. Joseph's Day, March 19.&mdash;Cf.
+<hi rend='italic'>infr.</hi> Letter <ref target='Letter_XXXVI'>xxxvi</ref>.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='135'/><anchor id='Pg135'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Ninth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Jan. 9, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The Opposition has become
+exceedingly troublesome. The successive gradation
+of Roman judgments about it is noteworthy. First,
+it was said that the Council ran like a well-oiled
+machine; that all were of one mind, and only vied
+with each other in their devotion to the Supreme
+Head. Then the local correspondents of foreign papers
+reported that something which looked like opposition
+was manifesting itself, but it was a mere drop in the
+ocean. So said the London <hi rend='italic'>Tablet</hi> and <hi rend='italic'>Weekly Register</hi>.
+Next they allowed there was certainly an Opposition, but
+it was already demoralized, or, as Antonelli said, must
+speedily fall to pieces. In diplomatic circles it was said
+that they were good people enough, but one must wait a
+little till the impressions of Fulda had worn off, and they
+had imbibed the <foreign rend='italic'>spirito Romano</foreign>; <q>il leur faut deux
+mois de Rome, et tout le monde sera d'accord.</q> One
+<pb n='136'/><anchor id='Pg136'/>
+month more, January, has to pass, and then in February
+conversions and desertions will begin. Meanwhile,
+Simor, Primate of Hungary, Tarnóczy of Salzburg, and
+Manning, are favourites for vacant Hats. It is hoped
+that the first will split up the harmony of the Hungarian
+Bishops, and bring over some with him as
+trophies into the Infallibilist camp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cardinals Schwarzenberg and Rauscher&mdash;that is now
+become perfectly clear&mdash;have not budged an inch;
+both of them feel thoroughly as Germans, and are
+nowise minded to desert, cowardly and despairing, into
+the great Romance camp. Schwarzenberg has circulated
+an excellently composed treatise, which speaks out
+very judiciously on the real needs of the Church, and
+certain reforms which are become urgently needed,
+and emphasizes the perversity shown in the demand
+for the Infallibilist dogma.<note place='foot'><q>In specie ne Concilium declaret vel definiat infallibilitatem summi
+Pontificis, a doctissimis et prudentissimus fidelibus S. Sedi intime addictis
+vehementer optatur. Gravia enim mala exinde oritura timent tum fidelibus
+tum infidelibus. Fideles enim ... corde turbarentur magis quam erigerentur,
+ac si nunc demum fundamentum Ecclesiæ et veræ doctrinæ stabiliendum
+sit; infideles vero novarum calumniarum et derisionum materiam
+lucrarentur. Neque desunt qui ejusmodi definitionem logice impossibilem
+vocant et ad ipsam Ecclesiam provocant, quæ ad instar solis splendorem
+lucis suæ monstrat quidem, sed non definit. Jure denique quæritur, cui
+usui ista definitio foret, de cujus sensu, modo et ambitu ampla inter
+theologos controversia est.</q></note> Cardinal Rauscher has
+<pb n='137'/><anchor id='Pg137'/>
+done the same, and his treatise against Infallibility is
+now in circulation. Something more has occurred also:
+on the 2d of January, 25 Austrian and German Bishops,
+with Schwarzenberg at their head, subscribed a protest,
+drawn up by Haynald, Ketteler, and Strossmayer, which
+is said to have been read and talked over fifteen times
+before it gave entire satisfaction. They appeal to their
+inherent rights, not dependent on Papal grace, but on
+Divine institution; ready as they are to guard the
+rights of the Head, they must also demand that the
+rights of the members shall be preserved and respected;
+the forms and traditions of the Tridentine Synod
+should not be so far departed from. The tone of the
+document is dignified. Rauscher has not subscribed
+though he thoroughly agrees with it, it is said from
+considerations the force of which the other Prelates
+acknowledged. The petition handed in by 15 French
+Prelates for an alteration of the order of business the
+Pope has answered by a mere dry refusal. We shall
+soon see whether the Germans will meet with similar
+treatment; in the eyes of these Italians the most
+modest criticisms and demands are open rebellion. To
+many of the German and Hungarian Bishops even
+this Protest seemed too bold and audacious, and they
+<pb n='138'/><anchor id='Pg138'/>
+have prepared another representation, with forty signatures,
+expressed in much more moderate terms. They
+entreat the Pope to be graciously pleased to allow them
+to inspect the stenographic reports, and to let the
+Bishops print their treatises on the questions laid before
+them without the censorship, for the information of
+their colleagues. Posterity will marvel at the humble
+submissiveness of these Bishops, and the wisdom of the
+Roman policy, which, after two years' preparation for
+the Council, provides a hall where all discussion is
+impossible, and furthermore prohibits the Bishops
+from inspecting the stenographic reports of their own
+speeches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some ten of the leading Bishops of different nations
+have formed themselves into an International Committee,
+so as not, for the future, to ask concessions of the
+Pope in the name of one nation only&mdash;the French or
+German. They wish that every Bishop should be
+admitted to speak in Congregation according to the
+order of inscription, irrespective of hierarchial rank or
+age, and that the speeches should be at once printed,
+and distributed to the Bishops before the next Session;
+and finally, that the Papal Commission for revising
+motions, which holds the whole Council in its hands,
+<pb n='139'/><anchor id='Pg139'/>
+should be increased by the introduction of members
+freely elected. Some further requisitions which I am
+not acquainted with are said to be added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Against these things, which make the Pope very
+irritable, two principal remedies are adopted. In the
+first place, an attempt is made to prevent any number of
+Bishops meeting together, either by direct prohibition
+or by announcing the displeasure of the supreme
+authority against those who take part in such separate
+deliberations, which are said to be revolutionary.
+And next, the Bishops are worked upon individually,
+and every one is watched and taken stock of, on the
+assumption that everybody has his price, if one could
+only discover what it is. Two examples of this may
+be cited here. One of the most distinguished German
+Bishops, who is free from the usual clerical vanity, and
+could neither be bought with titles nor with the cut or
+colour of a vestment, was quite lately accosted by the
+Pope&mdash;in full consciousness of his Vicarship of Christ&mdash;with
+the question, asked in the most affectionate tone,
+<q>Amas me?</q> What inference was attached to an
+affirmative answer need not be specified. The other
+case occurred somewhat earlier. Lavigerie, Bishop of
+Nancy, came to Rome coveting some striking mark
+<pb n='140'/><anchor id='Pg140'/>
+of distinction. It seemed worth while to bind him
+closer to the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and so an article of ecclesiastical
+dress was hit upon, which he and no other Bishop of
+the Western Church was to wear. It was called a
+superhumeral, and is described as a somewhat broader
+stole, thrown over the shoulders, and adorned with
+fringes, with two maniples of the shape of shields
+hanging down from it. The effect is said to have been
+enormous, and of course since then Mgr. Lavigerie is a
+profoundly convinced Infallibilist. <q>C'est avec de
+hochets qu'on mène les hommes,</q> said the first
+Napoleon; but it moves one's pity to look at Bishops
+who let themselves be led by the nose by these childish
+toys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very instructive considerations may be formed here
+on the representation of particular nations and national
+Churches at the Council. Frenchmen and Germans must
+practise themselves in the virtues of humility and modesty,
+and learn how insignificant they are in the Catholic
+Church, in all that concerns doctrine and legislation.
+There is the diocese of Breslau, with 1,700,000 Catholics,
+but its Bishop has not been chosen for any single Commission,
+while the 700,000 inhabitants of the present
+Roman States are represented by 62 Bishops, and the
+<pb n='141'/><anchor id='Pg141'/>
+Italians form half or two-thirds in every Commission.
+For the Kingdom of God, wherein the least is greater
+than John and all the Prophets, lies, as is well known,
+between Montefiascone and Terracina, and whoever
+first saw the light in Sonnino, Velletri, Ceccano, Anagni,
+or Rieti, is predestinated from the cradle <q>imperio
+regere populos.</q> It is true the 62 Bishops of this
+chosen land and people have not succeeded in restoring
+the most moderate standard of morality in their
+little towns and villages; there are still whole communities
+and districts notoriously in league with brigands&mdash;but
+the Council has no call to trouble itself with
+matters of that sort. There are the Archbishops of
+Cologne with 1,400,000, of Cambray with 1,300,000,
+and of Paris with 2,000,000 Catholics, but any four
+of the 62 Neapolitan and Sicilian Bishops can out-vote
+these Bishops with their 5,000,000 Catholics at their
+back. Thus the 12,000,000 Catholics of Germany Proper
+are represented at this Council by fourteen votes.
+Their relative positions may be expressed in this
+way: in Church matters twenty Germans count for less
+than one Italian. And should a German indulge any
+fancy that his nation, with its numerous theological
+High Schools, and its learned theologians, might reasonably
+<pb n='142'/><anchor id='Pg142'/>
+claim some weight at a Council, he only need
+come here to be cured at once of that notion. There is not
+in all Italy one single real Theological Faculty, except in
+Rome; Spain gets on equally without any higher theological
+school or any theology; yet here at the Council
+some hundreds of Italians and Spaniards are masters,
+and are the appointed teachers of doctrine and dictators
+of faith for all nations belonging to the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Count Terenzio Mamiani has lately observed, in the
+<hi rend='italic'>Nuova Antologia</hi>, published at Florence, that in Italy
+there are not so many religious books printed in half a
+century as appear in England or North America (or Germany)
+in one year. And we must remember too that the
+theological literature published in Tuscany and Lombardy
+might almost be called copious in comparison
+with the nearly absolute sterility of the States of the
+Church. Here in Rome you may find a lottery dream-book
+in almost every house, but never a New Testament,
+and extremely seldom any religious book at all.
+It seems as though it were a recognised principle that, the
+more ignorant a people, the greater must be the share their
+hierarchy have in the government of the Church. And
+thus we have the question of nationalities within the
+bosom of the Church. Everything done here is but
+<pb n='143'/><anchor id='Pg143'/>
+the expression of one idea and the means to one end,
+and this idea and end are that the spiritual domination
+of the Italians over the other nations, especially over
+the Germans and French, should be extended and confirmed.
+Above a hundred Spaniards have come from
+both sides of the ocean to let themselves be used as
+instruments of the Italians at the Council. They have
+no thought, or will, or suggestion of their own for
+the good of the Church. It is difficult to form a
+notion of the ignorance of these Latins in all historical
+questions, and their entire want of that general cultivation
+which is assumed with us as a matter of course in
+a priest or bishop. And up to this time I have always
+found here that the predilection for the Infallibilist
+theory is in precise proportion to the ignorance of its
+advocates. It has been deemed necessary still further
+to help on this immense numerical superiority, and so
+the Pope, as I am informed, has appointed during the
+two years since the proclamation of the Council 89
+Bishops <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, whose flocks are in the moon or in
+Sirius.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now for something about the course of procedure
+in the Council as to the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> during the last
+ten days. There are only constantly speeches on each
+<pb n='144'/><anchor id='Pg144'/>
+side, for a real discussion is impossible in the Hall,
+and it is obvious that it was chosen, and is still kept
+to in spite of daily experience, for that very reason.<note place='foot'>[Monsignor Nardi said this <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>totidem verbis</foreign> to an Anglican clergyman
+who was inspecting the Council Hall.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+Some speakers, however, whom nature has endowed
+with a specially ringing voice, have made an unwonted
+impression. The most significant occurrence was Cardinal
+Capalti's interruption of Strossmayer's speech.
+The Bishop had touched on the novel and unconciliar
+form in which the decrees were to be published, as
+decisions of the Pope, with the mere approval or forced
+consent of the Council. It was an ominous circumstance
+that the assembly sacrificed by its silence the
+man who was speaking for its rights. Meanwhile there
+has been a wholly unexpected attack on the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> by
+a host of speakers, so that Antonelli, on leaving the
+Council, said, in visible excitement, to a diplomatist who
+was waiting for him, that this could not continue, or
+the Council would go on for ten years. Strossmayer
+was followed by Ginoulhiac, the learned Bishop of
+Grenoble, who spoke in the same sense. The proportion
+of speakers against the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> is overwhelming. In
+the Session of January 3, all four spoke against it, even
+<pb n='145'/><anchor id='Pg145'/>
+the Patriarch of Venice. An impression was produced
+by the warning of the Eastern Patriarch, Hassoun,
+against embittering the Orientals, and driving them
+into schism by dogmatic innovations. The Italian,
+Valerga, named by the Pope to the Latin Patriarchate
+of Jerusalem, represented the Roman standpoint in its
+crudest form, but he had his speech read for him by
+Bishop Gandolfi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is now said to be certain that Darboy, Simor, and
+Tarnóczy have been apprised of the intention to make
+them Cardinals. As regards the two last, the abandonment
+of all opposition to the Infallibilist dogma, and to
+every other decree on faith in a Papal sense, is an
+indispensable condition. But with Darboy the case
+is different: the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> must take him as he is or
+let him alone, for he cannot be bought at any price.
+The irritation, complaints, and sighs of the Pope at
+having to make this man a Cardinal, who will not
+yield or apologize, have already lasted some years. The
+Romanist party have published in a Quebec newspaper
+the Pope's bitter and reproachful letter to him, to which
+he made no reply. Darboy was and is resolved to be
+the <foreign rend='italic'>bonâ fide</foreign> Bishop of his diocese, the largest in the
+world, and will not admit any arbitrary encroachments
+<pb n='146'/><anchor id='Pg146'/>
+or concurrent jurisdiction of the Court of Rome to annul
+his acts at its caprice. <q>This stinks of schism,</q> say the
+Romans here.<note place='foot'><q>Questo puzza di schisma.</q></note> And therefore, according to Roman
+notions, he is <q>a bad Christian,</q> for he does not believe
+in Papal Infallibility, and will not vote for it even as a
+Cardinal. Moreover, nobody sees better through the
+whole web of curialistic policy, with its artifices, small
+and great, and he shows not the slightest sympathy for
+it, so that in any case he will be a very inconvenient
+and unprofitable Cardinal. At the same time he is a
+man of rare eloquence, rich experience and knowledge
+of mankind, and easily outweighs ten Italian Cardinals
+in culture and learning. And the worst of it is that this
+bitter necessity of elevating Darboy has to be accepted
+with a good grace, for France wills it, and France must
+still remain the magnanimous champion of Rome and
+the Council. Some consolation is found for it in the
+now openly proclaimed apostasy of Archbishop Spalding
+of Baltimore, who has hitherto been wavering, for
+it is hoped that other American Bishops will follow his
+example.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If at the end of the first month we take a view of
+the situation, it is clear that the word <q>Council</q> requires
+<pb n='147'/><anchor id='Pg147'/>
+to be taken in a very wide and general sense to include
+this assembly. It cannot be compared with the ancient
+Councils in the first thousand years of Church history,
+before the separation of East and West, for there are no
+points of contact. In the first place, the whole lay
+world, all sovereigns and their ambassadors, are entirely
+excluded from the Synod, which has never happened
+from the Council of Nice downwards. That was, of
+course, necessary, for even at Trent the French ambassador
+announced, on entering the Council, that his
+King had sent him to watch over the freedom of the
+Bishops; and certainly the ambassadors of Catholic
+Powers would have protested against the present
+arrangements and order of business, which give
+much less security than even at Trent. Here the
+Bishops are in a sense the Pope's prisoners. Without
+his permission they cannot leave the Council, they are
+forbidden to meet together for common deliberation,
+are not allowed to print anything till it has passed the
+censorship, or to bring forward any motion without the
+Pope's approval. It is the Pope who makes the decrees
+and defines the dogmas; the Council has simply to
+assent. Two rights only are left to the Bishops; they
+can make speeches in the General Congregation, and
+<pb n='148'/><anchor id='Pg148'/>
+they can say <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> or <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>. There is a quite luxurious
+abundance of means of coercion, impediments and
+chains;&mdash;with the Pope's 300 episcopal boarders, the
+62 Bishops of the Roman States, the 68 Neapolitans,
+Sicilians, etc., all manœuvring with a precision a
+Prussian General could not wish to surpass on the
+reviewing-ground, the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> might have fairly hoped to
+gain its ends, even were a little more freedom allowed
+to the Opposition section of the Assembly.<note place='foot'>[Compare with this account of the freedom of the Council the letters of
+two French Bishops, published in the <hi rend='italic'>Times</hi> of May 3, and the <hi rend='italic'>Journal
+des Débats</hi> of May 10.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='149'/><anchor id='Pg149'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Tenth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Jan. 15, 1870.</hi>&mdash;On Sunday last the Pope gave
+audience to a great crowd of visitors,&mdash;some 700 or
+1000, it is said,&mdash;at once, and took occasion to express
+before them his displeasure at the Opposition Bishops.
+He said there were some Prelates who lacked the temper
+of perfect faith, and hence arose difficulties, which
+however he, the Pope, should know how to overcome.
+In Church matters no attention was to be paid to the
+judgment of the world, as he himself despised it, for
+the Church's kingdom is not of this world. It has
+hitherto of course been held in the Church that the judgment
+of the world&mdash;that is, of their flocks, who constitute
+their own immediate world&mdash;is exactly what the
+Bishops ought to attend to very much, and to avoid
+giving offence to them and perplexing their consciences
+in matters of religion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The prohibition to hold large episcopal meetings, communicated
+<pb n='150'/><anchor id='Pg150'/>
+to the French Bishops only through Cardinal
+Bonnechose, is not obeyed either by the French or Germans,
+who continue to take counsel together. The
+united Germans and Hungarians have accepted in substance
+an address drawn up by Cardinal Rauscher, and
+on Sunday, January 9, bound themselves by a reciprocal
+obligation, with forty-three signatures, to vote against
+and combat in all conciliar methods the erection of
+Papal Infallibility into a dogma. The Austrian Prelates
+stand foremost in clearness, decision, and courage.
+Rauscher, Schwarzenberg, Haynald, and Strossmayer
+know what they want, are full of true love for the
+Church, understand the greatness of the danger, and
+are perfectly aware that no positive gain, nor any of
+the important reforms so urgently needed, can be
+expected from this Council&mdash;the Spanish and Italian
+phalanx is too strong and impenetrable for that,&mdash;but
+they hope, at least, by energetic resistance to ward off
+positive mischief from the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French on their part are active; Cardinal Mathieu,
+who returned to Rome, January 5, has opened a
+saloon in his house for the deliberations. Next to Dupanloup,
+Bishop Place of Marseilles, Meignan of Châlons,
+Landriot of Rheims, and Ginoulhiac of Grenoble, speak
+<pb n='151'/><anchor id='Pg151'/>
+most decidedly. There are some thirty-five like-minded
+with them, and the inopportunists among them and the
+Germans are gradually coming to perceive that their
+position is quite untenable, and that to persist in treating
+Infallibility as a mere question of time and convenience,
+is to give their adversaries a safe and easy victory. But
+the Germans are further advanced in this conviction
+than the French. The now famous Infallibilist Address
+seems to have been simultaneously hawked about from
+two quarters, viz., by the trio of Manning, Deschamps,
+and Spalding, and by Martin and Senestrey. Who
+composed it, and how many Bishops have signed it, is
+still uncertain; the movement has come to a dead-lock,
+perhaps because the Spaniards, who talk of presenting
+an address of their own, don't want to sign it. Several
+Italians too refused to sign, and so the result has not
+been as satisfactory as was hoped, although it can
+hardly be doubted that the dogma will have 450 or
+500 votes when it is laid before the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a characteristic feature of the case, that throughout
+Italy prayers are offered in all the monastic communities
+still surviving, and in all zealously Catholic
+families, for the definition of the new dogma. The fact
+is mentioned in English journals, and I have heard it
+<pb n='152'/><anchor id='Pg152'/>
+confirmed here. It reveals the patriotic feeling, that
+Papal Infallibility is an Italian possession more or less
+profitable to every member of the nation. <q>The Pope,</q> as
+one hears it said here, <q>will always feel and think above
+all as an Italian; his decrees are manufactured by a
+Court nine-tenths of whom, at least, are Italians, and
+with his infallibility under our management, we Italians
+shall be able to dominate and make capital out of
+all other nations, in so far as they desire to be Catholic.</q>
+The Italian is generally a good calculator. However,
+Italian priests and prelates feel and know right well
+what every nation and national Church owes to itself.
+If the Papacy belonged to any other nation, the Italians
+would never dream for a moment of acknowledging the
+system of Papal absolutism with its grand prop of Papal
+Infallibility. One soon observes, in conversing with
+these Monsignori, how they despise in their hearts the
+French and German Ultramontane Bishops, while at
+the same time admitting the correctness of their views,
+and praising them liberally for rolling in the dust before
+the infallible <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and crying out to the Romans, as
+that orator Ekebolius cried out to the Emperor Julian,
+<q>Only trample us under your feet, the salt that has
+lost its savour.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='153'/><anchor id='Pg153'/>
+
+<p>
+Thirty-five German Bishops have declared at the
+beginning, that they are ready to subscribe the above-mentioned
+counter address against the dogma of Infallibility,
+pretty fully expressed in the form of a petition
+to the Pope, and among them are included those who
+were before of opinion that they had sufficiently discharged
+their duty by the letter they sent to him from
+Fulda. This is a praiseworthy example of harmony,
+but at the same time the greatness of the danger, which
+has now become evident to even the most trustful mind,
+is shown by the fact that all present at the consultation
+on this address bound themselves in writing to
+subscribe it. It is needless to say that the Tyrolese and
+the pupils of the Jesuits, with Bishop Martin, held
+aloof from the meeting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another proof was given on this occasion of the very
+different measure dealt to the two parties. The Infallibilist
+Address was at once printed, though everything
+else here has first to undergo the most rigorous censorship.
+The Roman censors would, of course, have
+refused their <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>imprimatur</foreign> to the counter address, and
+there was some scruple felt about printing it out of the
+country, as though by an evasion of the Papal laws, and
+so it cannot be printed at all. Even Bishop Dupanloup
+<pb n='154'/><anchor id='Pg154'/>
+has been refused permission to print his answer
+to Deschamps. The address will probably be subscribed
+by the Bishops of each nation in separate
+batches, so that there will be five addresses, coinciding
+in substance. Forty-seven Germans and Hungarians
+are reckoned on&mdash;so many have subscribed already&mdash;and
+thirty-five French. The Anglo-Americans have
+somewhat altered the wording of the address, and say
+they can command twenty-five signatures. But what
+is most remarkable is, that a considerable section of the
+North-Italian Bishops from Piedmont and Lombardy
+now come out as opponents of Infallibilism, and give
+promise of twenty-five signatures for the counter address.
+The decisive point with them is their relation to the
+Italian nation and government, for the Infallibilist
+dogma must inevitably lead to a hopelessly incurable
+rupture between it and the Church. To these must be
+added six Irish and four Portuguese, making in all an
+Opposition of from 140 to 150 votes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great question daily mooted in the Vatican is
+now, how Infallibility can be erected into a dogma in
+spite of the resistance of the Opposition minority, for
+there is no longer any illusion as to an obstinate residue
+of anti-Infallibilist protesters being sure to be left, after
+<pb n='155'/><anchor id='Pg155'/>
+allowing for the fullest effects of all the alluring seductions
+used. Precedents are sought for in the history of
+Councils where the majority has passed decrees according
+to its own will, without regard to the opposite
+representations and negative votes of the minority. But
+no such precedents are to be found. At all Councils
+from Nice downwards the dogmatic decrees have always
+been passed only with entire or approximate unanimity.
+Even at Trent, where the Italians, commanded
+from Rome through the legates, dominated everything,
+many very important decrees were abandoned after
+being drawn up, as soon as a few Bishops only had
+pronounced against them. If only this fatal precedent
+of the Tridentine Synod could be got rid of! The
+Jesuits investigate and refine, but, unluckily for them,
+one of their own body, Father Matignon, in 1868, when
+an Opposition was still believed to be impossible, himself
+established the fact, and justified it on doctrinal
+grounds;<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Études de Théologie</hi>, Janvier 1868, p. 26:&mdash;<q>Le Concile n'imposait
+rien à notre foi, qui n'eût obtenu à peu près l'unanimité des votes.
+L'obligation de croire est une chose si grave, le droit de lier les intelligences
+est un droit si auguste et si important, que les pères pensaient n'en
+devoir user qu'avec la plus grande réserve et la plus extrême délicatesse.</q></note> and that is made use of now. So there is
+nothing left but to labour indefatigably for the conversion
+of opponents. But people in Rome seem not to
+<pb n='156'/><anchor id='Pg156'/>
+know <q>qu'on ne prend pas les mouches avec du
+vinaigre;</q> and that methods of coercion, intimidation,
+and discrediting character, are not quite the most
+effectual means, psychologically, for converting adverse
+Bishops, is clear from the tone again and again manifested
+in the speeches on the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, which has gained
+conspicuously in sharpness and explicitness. On January
+10, a Northern Prelate, distinguished for gentleness
+and refinement, but accustomed to parliamentary contests,
+said he had been obliged to speak in the vigorous style
+usual in his own country of the entire absence of real
+freedom in the Council, for the insolence of the other
+party was becoming daily more intolerable.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='157'/><anchor id='Pg157'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Eleventh Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Jan. 17, 1870.</hi>&mdash;It is a remarkable phenomenon
+that Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>, who is every way inferior to his predecessors
+of this century in theological culture, lets himself
+be so completely dominated by his passion for creating
+new articles of faith. Former Popes have indeed had
+their hobbies: some wanted to aggrandize and enrich
+their families; others, like Sixtus <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi>, were zealous in
+building, or, like Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi>, in fostering art and literature,
+or they waged wars like Julius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi>, or, finally, they
+wrote learned works, and composed many long Bulls full
+of quotations, etc., like Benedict <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi> But not one of
+them has been seized with this passion for manufacturing
+dogmas; it is something quite unique in the history
+of the Popes. Herein, therefore, Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> is a singular
+phenomenon in his way, and all the more wonderful
+from his hitherto having kept aloof from theology, and, as
+one always hears, not being in the habit of ever reading
+<pb n='158'/><anchor id='Pg158'/>
+theological books. If it is inquired how this strange
+idiosyncrasy has been aroused in the soul of a Pope
+who began his reign under such very different auspices,
+as a political reformer, the answer given by every one
+is, that it is the Jesuits, whose influence over him has
+been constantly growing since he took Father Mignardi
+of that Order for his confessor, and who have
+created and fostered in him this passion for dogma-making.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The displeasure and discontent of the Bishops finds
+constant nutriment in the conduct of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. They
+say that if these momentous propositions had been laid
+before them in good time, some months before the
+opening of the Council, so that they might have carefully
+examined them and pursued the theological studies
+requisite for that purpose, they should have come duly
+prepared, whereas now they are in the position of having
+to speak and vote on the most difficult questions almost
+extempore. The attacks and objections directed against
+the first part of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> in their speeches have not
+applied so much to the separate articles as to the general
+scope and tendency of the whole, and I have not been
+able to ascertain anything more certain about the
+matter, for the real elaboration of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, and discussion
+<pb n='159'/><anchor id='Pg159'/>
+of its articles in detail, has to be managed in the
+Commission; in the Council Hall it is impossible. As
+yet there have been only long speeches on either side,
+as in academies or in a school of rhetoric, which, for the
+most part, were not understood, and in which the main
+question&mdash;what shape the decrees are to take, if issued
+at all&mdash;was never grappled with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Friday, January 14, the debate on the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>
+opened. This is occupied with the duties of Bishops&mdash;their
+residence, visitation of their dioceses, and obligation
+of frequently travelling to Rome and presenting
+regular reports on the state of their dioceses; the holding
+of Provincial and Diocesan Synods, and Vicars-General.
+The duties of Bishops are the one thing
+spoken of, and the design is everywhere transparent of
+increasing their dependence on the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and centralizing
+all Church government in Rome still more than
+before. Archbishop Darboy observed on it, that it was
+above all necessary, in examining this second <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>,
+to discuss the rights of Bishops, instead of only the
+duties Rome assigned them. Cardinal Schwarzenberg
+had really opened the debate in this sense, and he had
+the courage to speak of the College of Cardinals, and the
+reforms it needed. A simple Bishop would not have
+<pb n='160'/><anchor id='Pg160'/>
+been suffered to do this, but they dared not interrupt a
+Cardinal. The speakers who followed, too, had a good
+deal to find fault with in the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, especially Ballerini,
+formerly rejected as Archbishop of Milan, and now
+titular Patriarch of Alexandria, and Simor the Primate
+of Hungary. This Prelate has protested so emphatically
+against the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> and the treatment the Bishops
+have experienced at the hands of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, that the
+offer of a Cardinal's Hat seems by no means to have
+produced the desired effect upon him. There are said
+to be still sixteen portions or chapters of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>
+in reserve, so that the authorities are already displeased
+at the length of the Bishops' speeches; and lately one
+Bishop gained general applause by saying he renounced
+his right to speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We may gain some very valuable evidences in Russia
+and Poland as to how Papal Infallibility is already
+conceived of, and what hopes and fears respectively are
+entertained in reference to the projected new dogma.
+The six or seven million Catholics of that empire are
+very variously situated, and have different interests,
+and therefore, in some sort, opposite wishes. Among
+the Polish Catholics, who are just now being denationalized
+and Russianized, many are always looking
+<pb n='161'/><anchor id='Pg161'/>
+out for the overthrow of the Russian dominion, and the
+restoration of a kingdom of Poland. To this party
+belongs Sosnowski, formerly administrator of the
+diocese of Lublin, whom the Pope has admitted to the
+Council. He is to represent the whole Polish Church
+at the Council, and is an ardent Infallibilist; he has
+accordingly given a severe snubbing, by way of answer,
+to the Polish priests who had communicated to him certain
+proposals of reform, with a view of restricting Papal
+absolutism, to be laid before the Council. His reply
+circulates here, and is also to be printed in a newspaper
+published at Posen. Sosnowski represents to
+the Polish clergy that the emancipation of Poland from
+Russia must continue to be the great object; and that
+for this a Pope recognised as completely absolute and
+infallible is indispensable. He appears to mean that
+such a Pope, being supreme lord over all monarchs and
+nations, can even depose the Russian Czar, or at least
+absolve the Poles from their oath of allegiance. He
+moreover assures them that Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> has told him
+he reckons confidently on this emancipation of Poland
+from Russia. Here in Rome it is said and taught that
+the Pope is supreme master even of heretical and
+schismatical just as much as of Catholic sovereigns; for
+<pb n='162'/><anchor id='Pg162'/>
+through baptism, whether received within or without
+the Church, every one at once becomes his subject.
+And we are reminded, in proof of this, how Pope Martin
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>, in 1282, deposed the Greek Emperor, Michael
+Palæologus, and absolved his subjects from their
+allegiance, simply because he had made a treaty with
+the King of Aragon. This explains why the Russian
+Government told the Bishops who requested leave to
+attend the Council, that they might go to Rome, but
+should not return. The 2,800,000 Catholics in Russia
+Proper, in the ecclesiastical province of Mohilew, think
+very differently from Sosnowski. A clergyman from
+thence said to-day, <q>If Papal Infallibility is made an
+article of faith, put into the catechisms and taught in
+the schools, it will bring us into a most difficult and
+desperate position as regards the Russian Government
+and people. We shall be told that our Czar sits in
+Rome, and that we obey him rather than the Czar at
+St. Petersburg, to whom we only swear a conditional
+allegiance, holding ourselves ready to rebel, if our infallible
+master at Rome absolves us from the oath; that
+we put his commands and prohibitions above the law
+of the land and the will of the Emperor. And thus,
+if Papal Infallibility is defined at Rome, it will be
+<pb n='163'/><anchor id='Pg163'/>
+almost equivalent for us to a sentence of death on the
+Catholic Church in Russia, for everything will be done
+to undermine a Church regarded as an enemy and
+standing menace to the State.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two new works have arrived here, each of which, in
+its own way, touches on the great question of the
+day. The one is a book of Dr. Pusey's, on the relations
+of the English Church to the Catholic, where he
+declares that making Papal Infallibility a dogma would
+destroy all hope of a reunion of the Churches, or of the
+adhesion of any considerable section of the English
+Church.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Is Healthful Reunion Impossible?</hi> By E. B. Pusey, D.D. Rivingtons,
+1870.</note> Manning has assured them in Rome of
+precisely the reverse. The other work is the first
+Letter of the famous Oratorian, Father Gratry, to the
+Archbishop of Mechlin, a pungent criticism on that
+Prelate's brochure in favour of Infallibility, and on his
+gross misrepresentations of the history of Pope Honorius.<note place='foot'>[Gratry's four Letters have been translated by the Rev. T. J. Bailey.&mdash;(Hayes).&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+Gratry also exposes the Roman falsifications
+introduced into the Breviary. It may alarm the curialists,
+when they discover how all the most intellectually
+conspicuous among the French clergy pronounce
+<pb n='164'/><anchor id='Pg164'/>
+against their favourite doctrine, and their design
+of imposing it on the whole Church, and how the
+disreputable means employed for building up this system,
+by trickery and forgeries, are more and more
+being brought to light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Pope's attempt to reduce 740 members of the
+Council to complete silence on all that goes on there
+has proved a failure, as might have been foreseen. A
+great deal has come out, and the Pope manifests great
+displeasure at it. In a conversation with a diplomatist,
+who asked him how, with this rule, trustworthy
+reports could be sent to the different Governments, he accused
+the French Bishops of violating the secrets of the
+Council, and called them <q>chatterboxes</q> (<foreign lang='it' rend='italic'>chiacceroni</foreign>).
+Accordingly, in the Session of January 14, a more rigorous
+version of the order of business was read, to the effect
+that the Pope had made it a mortal sin to communicate
+anything that took place in the Council; so that
+any Bishop who should, for instance, show a theologian,
+whose advice he wanted, a passage from the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>
+under discussion, or repeat an expression used in one
+of the speeches, incurs everlasting damnation! If your
+readers think this incredible, I can only assure them
+that it is literally true, and must refer them to the
+<pb n='165'/><anchor id='Pg165'/>
+moral theology of the Jesuits on the foundation of the
+Pope's right to brand human actions, forbidden by no
+law of God, with the guilt of mortal sin, at his good
+pleasure. A Papal theologian, whom I questioned on
+the subject, appealed simply to the statement of Boniface
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>, that the Pope holds all rights in the shrine of
+his breast.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='166'/><anchor id='Pg166'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twelfth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Jan. 26.</hi>&mdash;The grand topic of all conversations
+is Bishop Strossmayer's speech of yesterday; and it is
+possible to give a pretty correct description of its contents,
+which seem to have made a profound impression
+on his 747 hearers. The Bishop declared it to be
+unseemly to begin with the disciplinary decrees about
+Bishops and their obligations, because this might raise
+the suspicion in their dioceses that their recent conduct
+had given occasion to it. When their duties were
+spoken of, their rights should also be put forward.
+But, in fact, the reform must be carried through from the
+highest ranks of the hierarchy to the lowest, so that the
+Bishops should be introduced in their proper order.
+He spoke of the necessity of making the Papacy common
+property, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, making non-Italians eligible; for it
+is now a purely Italian institution, to the immense
+prejudice of its power and influence. He pointedly
+<pb n='167'/><anchor id='Pg167'/>
+insisted on a similar universalizing of the Roman Congregations,
+so that the important affairs of the Catholic
+Church should not be arranged and settled in a narrow
+and jealous spirit, as had unfortunately been the case
+hitherto. And all matters not necessarily pertaining to
+the whole Church must be withdrawn from the competence
+of the Congregations, so that it might no longer
+be the case, as before, <q>ut qui superfluis et minimis
+intendit, necessariis desit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strossmayer insisted on a reform of the College of
+Cardinals, in the sense of its containing a representation
+of all Catholic countries in proportion to their extent
+and importance. The impression produced is said to
+have been most thrilling, when he exclaimed that it
+was to be wished the supreme authority in the Church
+had its throne, where the Lord had fixed His own, in
+the hearts and consciences of the people, and this would
+never be the case while the Papacy remained an Italian
+institution. And with regard to the more frequent
+holding of Councils, he is said to have reminded the
+Fathers of the <hi rend='italic'>Decretum Perpetuum</hi> of Constance, that
+a Council should be assembled every ten years. But
+the presiding Legates seemed to be greatly disturbed at
+the mention of Constance. The Bishop proceeded to
+<pb n='168'/><anchor id='Pg168'/>
+point out that ordinary prudence urgently dictated to
+the Church the more frequent holding of Councils. The
+increased facilities of intercourse supplied means to the
+Church to gather more frequently in Council round its
+head, and thus show an example to the more advanced
+nations, who transact their affairs in common assemblies,
+of the open-heartedness and freedom, the patience and
+perseverance, the charity and moderation, with which
+great questions should be treated. Once, when Synods
+were more frequent in the Church, the nations had
+learnt from her how to bring their affairs to a settlement,
+but now the Church must offer herself
+teacher in the great art of self-government.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strossmayer urged that an influence over episcopal
+appointments should be given to Provincial Synods,
+in order to remedy the dangers connected with the
+present system of nominations, which have become
+incalculable. He lashed with incisive words and brilliant
+arguments those who preach a crusade against
+modern society, and openly expressed his conviction
+that henceforth the Church must seek the external
+guarantees of her freedom solely in the public liberties
+of the nations, and the internal in intrusting the episcopal
+Sees to men filled with the spirit of Chrysostom,
+<pb n='169'/><anchor id='Pg169'/>
+Ambrose, and Anselm. It cut to the quick when he
+spoke of the centralization which is stifling the life of
+the Church, and of the Church's unity, which only then
+reflects the harmony of heaven and educates men's
+spirits, when her various elements retain inviolate their
+proper rights and specific institutions. But as the
+Church now is, and in the organization designed to be
+imposed on her, her unity is rather a monotony that
+kills the spirit, excites manifold disgust, and repels
+instead of attracting. On this point the Bishop is said
+to have made very remarkable statements from his own
+experience, proving that, as long as the present system
+of narrow centralization endures, union with the Eastern
+Church is inconceivable, and, on the contrary, new perils
+and defections will be witnessed. He called the canon
+law a Babylonish confusion, made up of impractical
+and in most cases corrupted or spurious canons. The
+Church and the whole world expect the Council to
+make an end of this state of things by a codification
+adapted to the age, but which must be prepared by
+learned and practical men from every part of the
+Catholic world, and not by Roman divines and canonists.
+In repudiating the proposal of a previous speaker, that
+the Pope should take a general oversight of the Catholic
+<pb n='170'/><anchor id='Pg170'/>
+press, he seized the opportunity of pronouncing a glowing
+panegyric on a man who had been shamefully
+maligned by that press, but to whom is chiefly owed
+any real freedom that exists in this Council. Every
+eye was turned on Dupanloup.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many single sayings are quoted from this magnificent
+speech. A French Prelate had desired that Bishops
+should not sit in the confessional; Strossmayer replied
+that he must have forgotten he was the countryman of
+St. Francis of Sales. Another speaker had maintained
+that the reformation of the Cardinals should be intrusted
+to their Father, the Pope; Strossmayer replied
+that they had also a Mother, the Church, to whom it
+always belongs to give them good advice and instruction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The speech lasted an hour and a half, and the impression
+produced was overwhelming. Bishops affirm that
+no such eloquence in the Latin tongue has been heard
+for centuries. Strossmayer does not indeed always
+speak classical Latin, but he speaks it with astonishing
+readiness and elegance. Cardinal di Pietro, who
+answered him yesterday, spoke of the <q>rara venustas</q>
+of his speech. It is related in proof of his noble manner,
+and the spirit in which he spoke and was listened
+<pb n='171'/><anchor id='Pg171'/>
+to, that the opponent he most sharply attacked immediately
+asked him to dinner. He is said to have
+received 400 visits in consequence of his speech. The
+President paid him a singular compliment in putting
+out a special admonition the day after his speech against
+any manifestation of applause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was the greatest excitement beforehand. His
+eloquence was already known from his former speech,
+which was rendered more significant from the Legates
+interrupting him. Had he been again interrupted this
+time, every one felt that the freedom of the Council
+would be in the greatest danger. Strossmayer's tact
+and moderation prevented it, although it was observed
+that Cardinal Bilio wished on one occasion to make the
+Presidents interfere. When Strossmayer mounted the
+tribune, somebody was heard to say, <q>That is the Bishop
+against whom the bell will be used.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='172'/><anchor id='Pg172'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Thirteenth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Jan. 30, 1870.</hi>&mdash;A great deal has happened
+since my letter of January 17. My last was exclusively
+devoted to the impression produced by Strossmayer's
+speech, and I must go back to several previous occurrences.
+I will therefore enter directly on the most
+important facts of the last few days. You have already
+heard from the telegrams that the Pope has returned the
+addresses of the Opposition, of which there were several,
+divided according to nationality. They will be at once
+handed over to the Commission <hi rend='italic'>de Fide</hi>, composed of
+twenty-four members. These counter addresses are
+subscribed by 137 Bishops, while 400 or 410 have
+signed the first address in favour of the dogma. This
+document, I can now inform you definitely, was the
+joint production of a committee consisting of Manning,
+Deschamps, Spalding, the German Bishops Martin and
+<pb n='173'/><anchor id='Pg173'/>
+Senestrey, Bishop Canossa of Verona, Mermillod of
+Geneva, and perhaps one or two more. That none of
+these gentlemen, or of the 400 signataries, have observed
+the gross and palpable untruths and falsifications of
+which this composition is made up, is marvellous, and
+justifies the most unfavourable inferences as to the
+theological and historical cultivation of these Prelates.
+If the names of the Bishops on either side are, not
+counted simply, but weighed, and the fact is taken into
+account that the main strength of the Infallibilist legion
+consists of the 300 Papal boarders who go through thick
+and thin in singing to the tune of their entertainer&mdash;that
+all the host of titular Bishops, with very few exceptions,
+and of the Romance South Americans, who are
+even more ignorant than the Spaniards, are ranged on
+the same side&mdash;and if we then compare the countries and
+dioceses represented respectively by the 400 and the
+137, we shall come to the conclusion that the overwhelming
+preponderance in number of souls, in intelligence,
+and in national importance, is wholly on the side
+of the 137 of the Opposition. It is besides affirmed
+now that the Address of the 400 was not really presented
+to the Pope at all, but withdrawn at the last moment.
+If that is true, it must have been in consequence of a
+<pb n='174'/><anchor id='Pg174'/>
+command or hint from the Pope, either from his advisers
+even yet feeling ashamed of exposing him by the reception
+of a document bristling with falsehoods, or because
+they thought he could not in that case reject the hated
+counter address, as he has done, without too glaring
+an exhibition of partisanship. The Spaniards have
+drawn up an address of their own, which harmonizes so
+well with the address of the 400, that Manning declared
+himself quite ready to sign it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The second important occurrence of the last few days
+is the treatment of the Chaldean Patriarch, an aged man of
+seventy-eight. He had commissioned another Bishop to
+deliver a speech he had composed, when translated into
+Latin, in the Council, expressing his desire to preserve
+the ancient <foreign rend='italic'>consuetudines</foreign> of his Church and to lay a new
+compendium of them before the assembly. He added,
+with indirect reference to the Infallibilist dogma, a warning
+against innovations, which might destroy the Eastern
+Church. The Pope at once ordered him to be summoned,
+he was to bring nobody with him; only Valerga, whom
+the Pope has named Patriarch of Jerusalem, one of the
+most devoted courtiers of the Vatican, was present as
+interpreter. He found the Pope in a state of violent
+excitement, trembling with passion, and after a great
+<pb n='175'/><anchor id='Pg175'/>
+deal of vehement language he was commanded either
+to resign his office on the spot, or renounce all the prerogatives
+and privileges of his Church. His request for
+two days to consider the matter was instantly refused,
+as also the request for leave to consult his own suffragans
+then in Rome. Had he refused, he would certainly
+have been incarcerated in a Roman prison; for it is
+notorious that according to the Roman theory every
+cleric is the subject, not only spiritually but bodily, of
+his absolute lord the Pope. So nothing was left him
+but to subscribe one of the papers laid before him, and
+make his renunciation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The third recent circumstance to be mentioned is the
+confidential mission of Lavigerie, Archbishop of Algiers,
+to Paris. I have spoken of this man before as Bishop
+of Nancy, and forgot to add that he had been translated
+to Algiers. He is to persuade the Emperor and the
+ministers Ollivier and Daru to make no opposition to
+the passing of the Infallibilist dogma, and to offer in
+return that the articles of the Syllabus on Church and
+State shall be either dropped, or modified in their application
+to France. He of course asserts that he has no
+mission of the kind, and is only going to Paris about an
+educational question, just as Cardinal Mathieu professed
+<pb n='176'/><anchor id='Pg176'/>
+to have only gone to France to hold an ordination.<note place='foot'>[Cf. <hi rend='italic'>supr.</hi> pp. <ref target='Pg090'>90</ref>, <ref target='Pg091'>91</ref>. The <hi rend='italic'>Tablet</hi> made the same assertions in both
+cases.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> In
+Paris the strangeness of the situation is remarked on,
+that the very State which used always most vigorously
+to assert its independence against the domineering pretensions
+of the Pope is now suffering, not only the
+infallibility but the supreme dominion of the Pope, and
+his right of interference in its political affairs, to be
+decreed under cover of its bayonets. And in Rome it
+is understood that, if the French troops were suddenly
+to disappear during the rejoicings and illuminations
+following on the Infallibilist triumph, the situation
+might become very uncomfortable. It is therefore
+thought that a couple of articles of the Syllabus might
+the more easily be surrendered, as the shield of Infallibility
+would cover the whole Syllabus, and no one could
+hinder an infallible Pope from taking the first opportunity,
+in spite of all secret promises, of again utilizing
+the principle now made into a dogma. The Roman
+clerics, whether high or low, are unable to comprehend
+that not only the German but the Latin nations feel so
+decided an antipathy to the domination of the priesthood
+over civil and social life, and on that account only
+<pb n='177'/><anchor id='Pg177'/>
+must resist the Infallibilist theory, because it involves
+the doctrine that the Pope is to encroach on the secular
+and political domain with commands and punishments,
+the moment he can do so without too great prejudice to
+his office and fear of humiliation. It seems so natural
+and obvious to a Roman Monsignore or Abbate that
+the chief priest should rule also over monarchs and
+nations in worldly matters; from youth up he has seen
+clergymen acting as police-officers, criminal judges, and
+lottery collectors, and has no other experience than of
+the parish priest, the Bishop, and the Inquisition, interfering
+in the innermost concerns of family life, and the
+<q>paternal government</q> often taking the shape of a strait-waistcoat;
+he lives in a world where the confusion of
+the two powers is incarnated in every college, congregation,
+and administrative office. Nowhere but in
+Rome would it have been possible for Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>xii.</hi>, with
+universal consent of all the clergy, high and low,
+to re-introduce the Latin language into the law courts
+after it had been abolished under the French occupation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lately, for the first time, a local priest, Leonardo
+Proja, in a work published here, has openly expressed
+his confidence that the Council will at once condemn
+the shocking error of setting aside the supreme dominion
+<pb n='178'/><anchor id='Pg178'/>
+of the Pope over the nations, even in civil matters
+(<q>vel in civilibus</q>) as an invention of the Middle
+Ages.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Adversus eos qui Sanctissimum R. Pontificis studium et Vaticani
+Concilii celebrandi necessitatem vituperant.</hi> Romæ.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Court of Rome and the Bishops are at present
+studying in a school of mutual instruction. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+studies the Bishops individually, especially the more
+prominent among them, and watches for their weak
+points and the ways of getting at them and making
+them pliable, and, above all, of dissolving national ties.
+They don't always manage matters skilfully, for the
+want of all real freedom, the use of coercive measures,
+and this apparatus of bolts and bars, cords and man-traps,
+by which the Prelates are surrounded and threatened at
+every step in Council, by no means produce a <foreign rend='italic'>couleur
+de rose</foreign> state of feeling, and the contrast between the
+title of Brother, which the Pope gives officially to every
+Bishop, and his way of treating them all, both individually
+and collectively, like so many schoolboys, is too
+glaring. Even the boasted freedom of speech does not
+extend very far, for every Prelate speaks under threat
+of interruption by the bell of the presiding Cardinal,
+directly he says anything displeasing to Roman ears.
+<pb n='179'/><anchor id='Pg179'/>
+On the other hand, the Bishops, during their stay
+here of six or seven weeks, have learnt a good deal
+more than the curialists, and many of them have really
+made immense advances, before which the Romans
+would recoil with a shudder, if they could see how
+things stand. A great many of these Prelates came
+here full of absolute devotion to the Pope, and with
+great confidence in the integrity of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and the
+purity of its motives. When they found themselves
+oppressed and injured at home by its measures or
+decrees, they still thought it was so much the better in
+the other branches of ecclesiastical administration. But
+now, and here, scales have, as it were, fallen from their
+eyes, and they are daily getting to understand more
+clearly the two mighty levers of the gigantic machine.
+The dominant view in Roman clerical circles here is,
+that the Church in its present condition needs, above
+all things, greater centralization at Rome, the extension
+and deepening of Papal powers, the removal of any
+limitations still standing in the way in national
+Churches, and the increase of the revenues accruing
+from Papal innovations. This it is the business of the
+Council to accomplish. When, therefore, two Bishops
+lately attacked in their speeches the abuse of expensive
+<pb n='180'/><anchor id='Pg180'/>
+marriage dispensations, it was at once said,
+<q>Well, then, if any change is made, what is to become
+of our Congregations and the revenues of their
+members?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Bishops will return home poorer in their happy
+confidence, but richer in such impressions and experiences.
+They will also carry back from Rome with them
+a fuller knowledge of the Jesuit Order, its spirit and tendencies.
+They now see clearly that the grand aim of the
+Order is to establish at least one fortress in every diocese
+with a Papal garrison, and to hold bishops, clergy, and
+people under complete subjection to Rome and her commands.
+A French Bishop observed the other day, <q>If
+matters go on in this way, we shall have even our holy
+water sent us ready-made from Rome.</q> And the Jesuits'
+business is to see that things do go on in this way. The
+Bishops have now an opportunity of seeing through the
+tacit compact, perfectly understood on both sides, between
+the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and the Order. The Pope accepts the
+Jesuit theology, and imposes it on the whole Church,
+for which he requires to be infallible; the Jesuits labour
+in the pulpit, the confessional, the schoolroom, and the
+press for the dominion of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and the Romanizing
+of all Church life. One hand washes the other, and the
+<pb n='181'/><anchor id='Pg181'/>
+two parties say, <q>We serve, in order to rule.</q> So far
+the relations of parties are clear enough, and result
+from the nature of the case. It is less easy to define
+the attitude and disposition of the Bishops towards
+each other.<note place='foot'>[Some idea of it may be formed from the answer made some months
+ago by a distinguished English Prelate at Rome to an Anglican friend,
+who had quoted the words of one of the Opposition Bishops, <q>You need
+not quote <emph>them</emph> to me; <emph>they are no more Catholics than you are</emph>,</q>&mdash;thus
+excommunicating at one swoop the very flower of the hierarchy of his
+Church.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='182'/><anchor id='Pg182'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fourteenth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 2, 1870.</hi>&mdash;There is evidently a deep split
+running through the Council. It is not merely the
+question of Infallibility which divides the Bishops,
+though this rules the whole situation. Each party has
+an opposite programme. The majority, with their reserve
+of the 300 Papal boarders, speak and act on the principle
+that they are there to accept without objection
+or substantial change whatever their master, the Pope,
+puts before them; that they are as Bishops what the
+Jesuits are as Priests&mdash;the heralds of the Pope's omnipotence
+and infallibility, and the first executors of his
+commands&mdash;and accordingly they mean to vote against
+every motion not introduced or sanctioned by the Pope,
+and to impede, both in Council and out of Council, whatever
+would displease him or curtail the revenues of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. And thus the 130 or 140 Bishops, who wish
+for improvement in Church matters, are thwarted and
+paralysed at every step by an adverse majority of 400,
+<pb n='183'/><anchor id='Pg183'/>
+admirably generalled. Cardinal Barnabó, Prefect of the
+Propaganda, is one of the most deserving men in the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> from this point of view. He maintains good
+discipline among the missionary Bishops, and is not
+ashamed to besiege an individual Bishop who is under
+Propaganda, or supported by it, for a whole evening,
+and threaten him with the withdrawal of his pay if he
+does not vote just as the Pope desires.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Midway between the two opposite camps there stands
+a body of some 150 Prelates of different nations, averse
+to the new dogma and to the whole plan of fabricating
+dogmas, to which the Jesuits are impelling the Pope,
+and alive to the necessity and desirableness of many
+reforms, but who, on various grounds, shrink from
+speaking out plainly and with the guarantee of their
+names.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As far as I can gather from personal intercourse of
+various kinds with many of the Infallibilist Bishops,
+their zeal is chiefly due to the following notions:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>First</hi>, They are more or less impressed by the representation
+that there is a general need for new dogmas,
+and that the old ones are no longer sufficient; but for
+preparing and enforcing these a single infallible dictator
+is better adapted than an episcopal assembly. For,
+<pb n='184'/><anchor id='Pg184'/>
+besides the inevitable opposition of a minority to every
+new dogma, the Bishops could never come forward as
+more than witnesses of the tradition of their respective
+Churches, whereas the infallible Pope, under direct
+inspiration of the Holy Ghost, can at once make into a
+dogma and article of faith whatever is clear to himself,
+without troubling himself about the past or the tradition
+of particular Churches, even the Roman,&mdash;as, for
+instance, at present, the doctrine of the bodily Assumption
+of the Virgin Mary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Secondly</hi>&mdash;and this is a crucial point,&mdash;The distinction
+between Bishops learned or ignorant in theology
+will become immaterial, because henceforth they will
+be mere promulgators and executors of Papal decrees on
+faith, and therefore ignorance of theology and Church
+history, which still has some importance, and is felt as
+a defect to be ashamed of, will no longer be any reproach
+to a Bishop. He who has no judgment of his
+own to form may well be incapable of forming one; he
+is the mere speaking-trumpet of one above him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Thirdly</hi>, Theology itself will be greatly simplified,
+and its study rendered shorter and easier. Those
+lengthy historical proofs of dogmas, the investigations
+as to the range and consequences of a doctrine and the
+<pb n='185'/><anchor id='Pg185'/>
+like, will all become superfluous, and matters will be
+settled out of hand by a brief question to the Pope and
+his reply. A collection of these rescripts, under the
+title of <q>The Art of Learning Theology in a Week,</q>
+may henceforth be placed in the hands of every candidate
+for the priesthood, and would supply the place of
+a whole library. Even as a matter of economy this is
+no despicable advantage. The majority of 400 and
+minority of 137 are then opposed to each other in this
+way:&mdash;the majority, or the Spanish and Italian section (<foreign rend='italic'>a
+fortiori fit denominatio</foreign>) say, <q>We are resolved to abdicate
+as a teaching body and integral constituent of the
+ecclesiastical ministry; we desire to commit suicide
+for the benefit of the Church, in order that the authority
+of a single man may be substituted for the collective
+authority of the whole episcopate and of all Churches.</q>
+The minority think, on the other hand, <q>We are resolved
+to hand down inviolate to our successors the inheritance
+of eighteen centuries, bequeathed to us by our predecessors.
+Our spiritual forefathers were judges and
+definers in matters of doctrine, and such we desire to
+remain; we do not choose to give a helping hand to
+making ourselves and our successors mere acclaimers
+instead of definers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='186'/><anchor id='Pg186'/>
+
+<p>
+For the rest, it involves a logical contradiction on the
+part of the Infallibilists to lay any special weight on
+mere numbers, for nothing turns on the votes of the
+Bishops in their system, but everything depends on the
+decision of the Pope. If 600 Bishops were ranged on
+one side and the Pope with 6 Bishops on the other,
+the 600 would be thereby proved to be in error and
+the 6 in possession of the truth. Cardinal Noailles
+observed very correctly, 150 years ago, that 300 Bishops,
+who proclaim a doctrinal principle on the mere word
+of a Pope whom they regard as infallible, have no more
+weight than one single Bishop who votes on his own
+personal conviction. The opposition of the minority, as
+might be expected from their antecedents of the last
+twenty years, is indeed wrapped up in cotton, but at
+bottom it is positive enough. It comes to saying that,
+if the Pope really wishes the Council to take in hand
+the question of Infallibility, witnesses must be heard
+on the subject.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Address of the forty-five German and Hungarian
+Bishops objects to the boundaries, as they had been
+hitherto drawn by the Pope for the teaching of the
+Church, being transgressed, and the Council being compelled
+to enter on a discussion of the grounds <hi rend='italic'>pro</hi> and
+<pb n='187'/><anchor id='Pg187'/>
+<hi rend='italic'>con</hi>, which must necessarily bring much suspicious matter
+into public debate. The definition itself would be sure
+to excite hostility against the Church, even with men of
+the better sort (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>melioris notæ viros</foreign>) and lead to attacks
+upon her rights. It may be said that the whole German
+episcopate, and the immense majority of the German
+Catholic Church by their mouth, has spoken out
+against the Infallibilist dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Simor, Patriarch of Hungary, has not, or at least not
+yet, subscribed the Address, but he spoke emphatically
+against the dogma in the meeting of German Bishops
+on January 16. All the other Hungarian Bishops at
+Rome, thirteen in number, have signed the Address;
+only the Greek Uniate Bishop of Papp-Szilaghy has,
+like Simor, omitted to do so. The North Italian
+Bishops too have determined on an address, substantially
+identical with the German one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French Address, which thirty-three Bishops
+agreed to on January 15, at a meeting at Cardinal
+Mathieu's, differs somewhat in wording from the
+German, but the contents are the same in the main,
+and it is hoped to get forty signatures for this; twenty
+French Bishops wish to abstain from signing anything,
+and something under twenty have signed Manning's
+<pb n='188'/><anchor id='Pg188'/>
+address, so that there are still twice as many French on
+the side of the Opposition as of the definition. We
+may add seventeen North Americans, who have accepted
+the German Address, with the omission of the
+clauses omitted in the French one, while the North
+Italians adopted it unaltered. The opposition to the
+dogma has thus maintained an universal character, including
+the most various nationalities. But it would be
+hardly feasible to decide a new dogma by mere counting
+of heads, treating the Bishops, like the privates of a
+regiment, as all equal, so that one vote is worth just
+the same as another. An analysis of the component
+elements of this majority, and a comparison of it with
+the Opposition in scientific culture and representation
+of souls, would give sufficiently impressive results.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The most startling phenomenon is presented by the
+Belgian and English Bishops. The former are all on
+the Infallibilist side, and there can be no doubt that
+they understand the political importance of the new
+dogma. They apparently wish to make the breach
+incurable between the Catholics of the younger generation
+and the Liberal party, who adhere to the Belgian
+Constitution; for no Catholic for the future can at once
+recognise the doctrine of Papal Infallibility and the
+<pb n='189'/><anchor id='Pg189'/>
+principles of the Belgian civil law, without contradiction.
+What makes the majority of English Bishops
+zealous adherents of Infallibilism it is hard to say;
+they are not in other respects disposed to be led by
+Manning. Nor can we assume that, like the Belgians,
+they deliberately wish to make the Catholic Church of
+their country the irreconcilable foe of the British Constitution,
+though that would be the inevitable consequence
+of the doctrine. It has been pointed out to
+these Prelates from England, that the solemn declarations
+of English and Irish Catholics are still preserved
+in the State Archives, in which they formally renounced
+belief in Papal Infallibility, and purchased thereby the
+abolition of the old penal laws and Emancipation. Thus
+it is said in the <q>Declaration and Protestation,</q> signed
+by 1740 persons, including 241 priests, <q>We acknowledge
+no infallibility in the Pope.</q> In the <q>Form of
+Oath and Declaration,</q> taken in 1793 by all Irish
+Catholics, occur the words, <q>I also declare that it is not
+an article of the Catholic faith, neither am I thereby
+required to believe or profess, that the Pope is infallible.</q>
+And a Synod of Irish Bishops, in 1810, declared
+this oath and declaration to be <q>a constituent part of
+the Roman Catholic religion, as taught by the Bishops;
+<pb n='190'/><anchor id='Pg190'/>
+a formula affirmed by the Roman Catholic Churches
+in Ireland, and sanctioned and approved by the other
+Roman Catholic Churches.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hear that, among the Irish Bishops, Moriarty is
+averse to breaking with the ancient tradition of his
+Church. Bishop Brown of Newport, an open and
+decided opponent of Infallibilism, is kept away by ill
+health; Ullathorne of Birmingham and Archbishop
+MacHale of Tuam wish also to keep clear of it, but
+without signing the address. Bishop Clifford of Clifton,
+on the contrary, as I hear, has signed it. So Manning's
+following among his countrymen is a very
+divided one.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='191'/><anchor id='Pg191'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifteenth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 4.</hi>&mdash;There is a good deal of interesting
+matter to report of the Sessions of the last few weeks.
+And, first, as to the Council Hall: notwithstanding the
+great curtain, it remains a wretched apology for a
+Council-chamber, and I must repeat emphatically that
+such a discussion as, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, was possible in St. Paul's
+Church, at Frankfort, in 1848, would be hardly practicable
+here. Bishops whose voices are feeble and not
+penetrating enough, must give up the idea of speaking,
+and even strong men among them feel thoroughly exhausted
+after they have spoken. A French Bishop,
+whose speech had produced a great effect, said afterwards
+of the hall, <q>Elle est sourde, muette, et aveugle.</q>
+But the Pope persists, on account of the neighbourhood
+of the so-called <q>Confession of St. Peter,</q> from which
+he thinks a force issues to bind the Bishops closer to
+him, and fill them with contempt of the world. This
+influence, however, has been very little manifested as
+<pb n='192'/><anchor id='Pg192'/>
+yet&mdash;rather the reverse. There have been many Opposition
+speeches, and the bell of the presiding Legate
+not unfrequently interrupts them with its shrill dissonance;
+in the latter Sessions a new method has been
+practised of reducing unpleasant speakers to silence&mdash;by
+scraping with the feet. It is a striking fact that
+talent, eloquence, and force of thought are observed to
+be almost entirely on the side of the Opposition; very
+few men of mark or able speakers can be mentioned on
+the Infallibilist side. Manning and Mermillod would
+be good and versatile speakers, only they are not sufficiently
+masters of Latin. Deschamps alone on that
+side has won great applause as an eloquent speaker,
+though with sufficient poverty of thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the Cardinals, de Angelis, de Luca, Bilio,
+and Capalti are considered the four Papal pillars of the
+Council. Bilio, a Barnabite, and still a young man,
+passes in Rome for an eminent theologian, and while
+the other Cardinals and Monsignori would hold it a
+sin to understand German, he knows two German words,
+which he constantly repeats, but always with a shudder,
+<q>deutsche Wissenschaft.</q> He thinks German science
+something like the witches' caldron in Macbeth&mdash;full
+of horrible ingredients.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='193'/><anchor id='Pg193'/>
+
+<p>
+The first dogmatic <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> has gone back to the Commission
+on Faith after a long, many-sided, and severe
+criticism, and is to be revised and again laid before the
+Council as little altered as possible. The revision is
+intrusted to three of the most zealous Infallibilists,
+Martin, Deschamps, and Pie, with the indispensable
+Jesuits, Schrader and Franzelin. The Bishops are then
+simply to accept it without discussion. It is not to
+be discussed, first, because there can be no discussion
+in the Hall; secondly, because this wretched patchwork
+does not bear discussion; thirdly, because there would
+be no coming to an end this way; fourthly, and chiefly,
+because an excellent precedent will be created, which
+may be made a rule for the forthcoming <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign>, and
+will open the prospect of carrying through matters far
+more important and more valuable for the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If once the first <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> were voted without discussion,
+by the help of the devoted majority of 400, though
+against the opposition of many Bishops, the same
+method might be pursued with subsequent <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign>,
+and thus the most important of all, on the Church and
+the Pope, could be carried, which contains the most
+exorbitant assertions of Papal omnipotence, and implies
+Papal Infallibility, which is introduced by a side-wind.
+<pb n='194'/><anchor id='Pg194'/>
+By this means the maxim observed at former Councils,
+and even at Trent, that decisions can only be settled by
+a unanimous vote, would be happily got rid of, and the
+resistance of the Opposition broken or rendered useless.
+Such a victory of the curialistic party would exceed all
+other successes in importance and practical value. The
+Council is accordingly come to a momentous crisis.
+Father Theiner, the Prefect of the Papal Archives, has
+had a part of the first volume of his <hi rend='italic'>Acts of the Council
+of Trent</hi> printed. We find there a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>modus procedendi</foreign>,
+which secures to the Fathers of the Council much more
+freedom and action than the present regulations, of which
+Italian Prelates say themselves that they leave no
+freedom, and only allow a sham Council. Theiner has
+been altogether forbidden, by the management of the
+Jesuits, to publish his work, and has received the most
+strict commands not to show the part already printed
+to any Bishop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The introduction of the second <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, on Discipline,
+gave occasion to many earnest and important speeches.
+The Germans at first had to blush for one of their
+number, Martin of Paderborn, who made a speech overflowing
+with the most unqualified devotion to the will
+of the supreme master, the authorship of which was
+<pb n='195'/><anchor id='Pg195'/>
+attributed to his Jesuit domestic chaplain, Father Roh.
+But the speech of Archbishop Melchers of Cologne made
+all the more favourable impression. He spoke, with quiet
+dignity and freedom, of the perversity and shamefulness
+of the meddling Roman domination, the system of dispensations,
+and the unmeasured centralization. Great
+was the astonishment of the assembly; Cardinal Capalti
+went on urging, with impatient look and sign, on de Luca,
+the President for the day, to stop the German Archbishop.
+At last, when he had nearly finished, de Luca interrupted
+him, and said he must hand in his proposals to the
+Commission. Melchers did not let himself be put down;
+he replied that he had done that long ago, and had received
+no answer, and observed that he spoke in the
+name of more than a million German Catholics. And
+then he quietly went on with his speech. The words
+of Archbishop Haynald cut deeper still; he is the best
+speaker in the Council after Strossmayer, and is also
+subtle and circumspect, so that the Legate, who was
+visibly anxious to interrupt him, could not discover the
+right moment for putting his bell in motion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As little did they dare to interrupt Darboy, Archbishop
+of Paris, when he ascended the tribune and
+began as follows:&mdash;<q>We are told we are not to make
+<pb n='196'/><anchor id='Pg196'/>
+long speeches, but I have a great deal to say. We are
+told again not to repeat what has been said by others,
+but at the same time we are kept shut up in this Hall,
+where for the most part we cannot understand one another;
+we are not allowed to examine the stenographic
+reports of our speeches, and the only answer made to
+our representations is always the same&mdash;<q>The Pope wills
+it.</q> I don't know therefore what has been said by the
+speakers who have preceded me.</q> He then went on to
+speak of the rights of the Bishops, their degradation by
+the Roman centralizing system, <q>the caves, wherein
+the Roman doctors have buried themselves from the
+light of day,</q> etc. He spoke in admirable style, and
+was listened to with rapt attention, though at every
+word his auditors expected an interruption from the
+Legate; but it never came. Darboy himself said afterwards
+that he had done like Condé, and flung his
+marshal's staff into the ranks of the enemy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On January 22, Dupanloup made a speech in the
+same sense, which has already been reported to you,
+and took occasion to mention those courtiers who have
+learnt never to tell the truth to the Pope. Courtiers
+of this sort from various nations sat and stood in crowds
+around him. He might have added what was said to
+<pb n='197'/><anchor id='Pg197'/>
+the Pope&mdash;vainly, of course&mdash;300 years ago, in a work
+composed by his order, and is just as true now as then:
+that the dream of omnipotence and infallibility, so
+studiously produced and cherished in his soul by flatterers,
+is the main cause, next to the avarice of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, of the decline and corruptions of the Church.
+Meanwhile it is truly wonderful that so much could be
+said at all; it was felt to be a moral discomfiture or
+capitulation of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> in its state of siege. Cardinal
+Schwarzenberg, and after him the Primate of Hungary,
+had certainly struck the note which still rang on, but
+the Legates had not dared to silence them with the
+bell, and so missed the opportunity of <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>principiis obsta</foreign>.
+Schwarzenberg had already created a great sensation
+by recommending the periodical recurrence of Councils,
+afterwards taken up by Strossmayer, and then falling
+back on the decree of Constance (for decennial Councils),
+which is an abomination at Rome. No doubt they
+would have no objection in Rome to Councils every
+ten or twenty years, suitably modernized, manipulated,
+and obedient to every wink, like the present majority;
+but the fatal Opposition embitters this enjoyment, and
+when once the great work is accomplished, and Infallibility
+proclaimed, it will be found at Rome that all this
+<pb n='198'/><anchor id='Pg198'/>
+machinery is not worth its pay, <q>que le jeu ne vaut pas
+la chandelle;</q> for it costs too much money to entertain
+300 <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>-saying Bishops, to make it worth while often
+to reproduce the drama, or rather the pantomine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Other Prelates, whom the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> reckons among the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Dî minores gentium</foreign>, have no indulgence shown them.
+When an American Bishop spoke of the corruptions
+and gross falsehoods in the Roman Breviary, and of the
+fabulous interpolations in the works of some Fathers,
+<hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, St. Augustine, inserted there, Capalti rang his bell
+violently&mdash;the Fathers were not to be so spoken of.
+But the American did not let himself be disturbed, and
+proceeded at once to quote the Breviary lections from
+St. Gregory. He was again called to order, and told he
+must change the subject or leave the tribune.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this second <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, compiled by Jacobini, the
+second Secretary of the Council, the gross ignorance of
+the author is glaringly exposed. With the usual self-sufficiency
+of Rome, and with the aim of making the
+Bishops still more dependent on the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> than before,
+the special conditions of whole countries had been
+ignored. Thus every Bishop, who wished to leave his
+diocese, was first to get the Pope's permission from
+Rome, and the Archbishops were to delate all who
+<pb n='199'/><anchor id='Pg199'/>
+acted otherwise at Rome. Simor observed sharply on
+that, <q>This then is the position Rome assigns to
+Metropolitans, after robbing them of all their ancient
+rights: to be the accusers of their conprovincial Bishops.</q>
+Another declared roundly that, if his physician sent him
+to a watering-place, he should not think of asking leave
+from Rome. Jacobini would not even recognise the
+right of Bishops to attend the political assemblies of
+their countries, of which they are members by the Constitution,
+because, as the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> words it, <q>assembleæ
+generales</q> no longer exist in the sense allowed by
+Urban <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi> The Pope was further to have the right
+henceforth of giving away the benefices in the Bishop's
+gift during the vacancy of the See, which would bring
+in a large increase of taxes for the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and draw a
+number of candidates to Rome again, as in the palmy
+days before the Reformation. In Germany we should
+get back the class of so-called <foreign rend='italic'>Curtisanen</foreign>,<note place='foot'>[The <foreign rend='italic'>Curtisanen</foreign> were clerical place-hunters, who came to Rome to beg
+or traffic for benefices. Cf. <q>Janus,</q> p. 341.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> who notoriously
+did so much to promote the Protestant division.
+The Bishops inflicted many a blow on the abuse of
+expensive dispensations to be elaborated at Rome from
+artificially derived impediments of marriage (as of
+<pb n='200'/><anchor id='Pg200'/>
+cousins, godfathers, and the like) before the Legate's
+bell could stop them. Then a Hungarian Bishop related,
+how it often happens that a poor woman comes
+weeping to the Bishop, to beg him to save her marriage
+and her very existence by a dispensation. But the
+Bishop must let the poor woman be ruined, for not he
+but the Pope only can dispense, and <q>mulier non habet
+pecunias&mdash;pecunias.</q> The Court Prelates said afterwards
+that this Hungarian had made himself very disagreeable
+with his <q>mulier non habet pecunias.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The following occurrence was comic:&mdash;You know in
+what repute the supple and complaisant Fessler, Bishop
+of St. Pölten, is held here, the first herald for retailing
+the new dogma to the world. Not long ago, Charbonnel,
+the Capuchin Bishop of Sozopolis, placed himself near
+him, and began to speak of clerical place-hunting, the
+eagerness for distinctions and promotions among Bishops,
+and the crooked ways they often take to obtain them,
+and pointed so unmistakeably by look and gesticulation
+at his neighbour, the Secretary, that on going out Fessler
+said it was high time to put an end to the Council,
+which was every day getting more disagreeable. The
+question was then started by German and Hungarian
+Bishops whether it would not be better, as Martin
+<pb n='201'/><anchor id='Pg201'/>
+thought, to substitute lay-brothers for clergymen's housekeepers,
+or whether the restoration of <q>the common life</q>&mdash;the
+Chrodogang institute&mdash;of course in a very modified
+form, should be attempted. They overlooked the fact that
+such matters cannot be regulated by a Council, but must
+be arranged according to the disposition and circumstances
+of the clergy in the various dioceses. Haynald,
+Meignan, Bishop of Châlons, and the Chaldean Patriarch,
+insisted that mere school questions should not be decided
+by the Council without any necessity, and that some
+freedom of movement must be left to Science. But the
+word freedom has nowhere so ill a sound as at Rome.
+Only one kind of freedom can be spoken of here&mdash;the
+freedom of the Church; and, in their favourite and accustomed
+manner of speech, by the Church is intended the
+Pope, and by freedom domination over the State, according
+to the Decretals. And to talk of freedom of Science!
+The Council, if it entertained such views, would be forgetting
+altogether that it was only called together for
+two purposes&mdash;to increase the plenary power of the
+Pope, and to aggrandize the Jesuits. But the Order
+has, like the Paris labourer of 1848, <q>le droit du travail;</q>
+it is not content to exist only, but must work&mdash;of course
+in its own way,&mdash;and for this it requires two things:
+<pb n='202'/><anchor id='Pg202'/>
+first, new dogmas; and secondly, plenty of condemnations
+and anathemas. The business of the Council is
+to provide both.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Cardinals, with the exception of Rauscher,
+Schwarzenberg, and Mathieu, have taken no part in
+the speaking, nor have the Generals of Orders and
+Abbots. Only when the need for a reform of the Cardinals
+themselves was spoken of, Cardinal di Pietro
+rose, who is regarded as the most liberal-minded of the
+Italians in the Sacred College, to show that such a
+reform could only be a financial one, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, that the Cardinals
+required larger incomes. What the Bishops
+meant was something very different, viz., a better and
+fuller representation of different nations in the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>,
+and a limitation of the Italian monopoly. But scattered
+observations of that kind could elicit no sort of real
+apprehension in the minds of the Italians, who are
+firmly seated in the saddle; so secure do they feel in
+their possession of a dominion many centuries old, and
+so very odd do the claims of other nations appear to
+them. In this point the present Romans or Latins are
+of the same mind as the old Romans of the sinking
+Republic, who sacrificed 600,000 men in the Confederate
+war rather than allow equal political rights to their
+Italian allies.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='203'/><anchor id='Pg203'/>
+
+<p>
+The great blow, which brings matters near a decision,
+has now been just struck, and all that the Jesuit and
+anti-German party longed for, and the French and
+Germans feared, is now before our eyes, the third
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, <q>on the Church and the Pope,</q> has been distributed,
+and leaves hardly anything to be desired in
+point of clearness and plain speaking. These transparent
+decrees and anathemas may be thus summed up: <q>The
+Christian world consists simply of masters and slaves;
+the masters are the Italians, the Pope and his Court,
+and the slaves are all Bishops (including the Italians
+themselves), all priests, and all the laity.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This third <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, which was distributed to the
+Bishops on January 21, is a lengthy document of 213
+pages, entitled <hi rend='italic'>De Ecclesiâ</hi>, and it is the one the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+is chiefly bent on getting received. It is said to be the
+work of a red-hot Infallibilist, Gay, Vicar-General of
+the Infallibilist Bishop Pie of Poitiers, and is so drawn
+up that by a slight addition the Infallibility of the
+Pope, which it already leads up to and implies, can be
+inserted in express form very easily, and as the necessary
+logical supplement; and thus the internal harmony
+of this important document, with its appended anathemas,
+would be completely secured. Three main
+<pb n='204'/><anchor id='Pg204'/>
+ideas run through the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, and are formulated into
+dogmatic decrees guarded with anathemas: <hi rend='italic'>First</hi>, to
+the Pope belongs absolute dominion over the whole
+Church, whether dispersed or assembled in Council;
+<hi rend='italic'>secondly</hi>, the Pope's temporal sovereignty over a portion
+of the Peninsula must be maintained as pertaining to
+dogma; <hi rend='italic'>thirdly</hi>, Church and State are immutably connected,
+but in the sense that the Church's laws always
+hold good before and against the civil law; and therefore
+every Papal ordinance that is opposed to the Constitution
+and law of the land binds the faithful, under
+mortal sin, to disobedience to the Constitution and law
+of their country.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='205'/><anchor id='Pg205'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixteenth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 5.</hi>&mdash;On reviewing the situation, I believe
+I may venture to say that it has become better, far better,
+than it was a few weeks ago. For this the Christian
+world is mainly indebted to the noble, dignified and
+united attitude of the German and Hungarian Bishops.
+These men,&mdash;I speak of course only of the majority
+of the forty-six&mdash;while taking frequent and most conscientious
+consultation with one another, and knowing
+the three German Cardinals to be in substantial
+agreement with them, have gained almost daily in
+clearness of view, confidence and decision; and their
+example, again, has encouraged the Bishops of other
+nations. If, as many fear, Ketteler should, at the critical
+moment, go over to the Papal side, and let his sympathy
+for the convenient Infallibilist doctrine get the
+better of his love for the German Church and nation,
+his loss will be more than made up by forces newly
+<pb n='206'/><anchor id='Pg206'/>
+gained. Hefele, who is the first living authority about
+Councils, has signed the Opposition address, and would,
+I believe, have still more gladly signed a stronger one.
+Three Cardinals of one nation who don't want to
+have anything to do with Papal Infallibility! <q>It is
+an unheard-of, an abominable thing,</q> say the Romans.
+<q>O that we still had Reisach! his loss is bitter at so
+critical a moment, and that we should have to console
+ourselves for his death by the living voices of Martin,
+Senestrey, Leonrod and Stahl, is still bitterer!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Hungarians are greatly influenced by knowing
+that they would find themselves isolated in their own
+country, if they, the representatives of ecclesiastical
+reform, were to return from Rome conquered, and as
+forced believers in Papal Infallibility and the complete
+system of ecclesiastical despotism. Their position
+is one of close union, and by its union is imposing;
+whereas the fifteen or sixteen Bishops of Austrian
+Germany are somewhat weakened by the desertion of
+Martin and the three Bavarians and the approaching
+apostasy of Ketteler, who is already preparing the way
+for it in the <hi rend='italic'>Mainzer Journal</hi>. From thence, as I perceive,
+has the falsehood gained currency, that the Opposition
+are ready to accept Spalding's (professedly)
+<pb n='207'/><anchor id='Pg207'/>
+modified proposals, and thus to acknowledge Infallibility
+in its grossest form and vote the whole third
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>&mdash;that Magna Charta of ecclesiastical absolutism&mdash;absolutely
+and without any change. That would
+indeed be a catastrophe almost without precedent in
+Church history. We should have to assume that the
+Opposition Bishops had resolved to verify in their
+own case Mazarin's saying about Parliaments, that their
+policy is always to say <q>No,</q> and act <q>Yes.</q> Ketteler,
+moreover, has special grounds of his own for gaining or
+preserving the particular favour of the Pope; for remembering
+his retirement from the candidature for the Archbishopric
+of Cologne, he might effect the abolition of
+the compact of Rome with the Governments, which
+secures a veto to the latter, and the introduction of either
+entirely free elections with Papal confirmation, or, still
+better, of simple nomination of Bishops by the Pope.
+He has spoken in Congregation in this sense, and was
+of course cheered by the Infallibilists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No less strong and dignified is the attitude of half
+the French Bishops, who have attached themselves to
+men like Darboy, Dupanloup, Landriot of Rheims,
+Meignan of Châlons and Ginoulhiac of Grenoble. On
+the other side, there are about twenty decided Infallibilists,
+<pb n='208'/><anchor id='Pg208'/>
+while the rest of the French Bishops wait or
+avoid speaking out. The party of Darboy and Dupanloup
+have the double advantage of being supported by
+their Government&mdash;while the Austrian ministry assumes
+a wholly apathetic and indifferent position,&mdash;and of
+belonging to the nation whose troops make the Council
+and the civil Government of the Pope possible, and
+whose Bishops therefore the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> is obliged to treat
+with respect. A French Bishop can say a good deal
+without, as a rule, having to fear being called to order
+by the Legate's bell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The North American Bishops too are being gradually
+educated to ecclesiastical maturity in the school of
+Rome and the Council, and have already grown out of
+that naïve belief in the disinterested generosity and
+superhuman wisdom of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> which most of them
+brought here. To-day the Pope paid them a visit at the
+American College, conversed in a friendly way with the
+Bishops individually, said obliging things, and, in a word,
+displayed those well-known powers of fascination he
+has such a command of. <q>A month ago this would
+have taken effect,</q> said an American priest who was
+present, <q>but now it comes too late.</q> He also assured
+me that not five of the forty-five American Bishops
+<pb n='209'/><anchor id='Pg209'/>
+would sign the Infallibilist Petition or vote for the
+dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have heard many, and especially French, Prelates
+say, during the last few days, sometimes in obscure
+hints, sometimes clearly, that the Council will soon&mdash;in
+a few weeks&mdash;be closed or dissolved; an opinion all
+the more surprising, because nothing as yet has been
+done. In that case the Bull with the many Excommunications
+will have to be treated as issuing from the
+Council.<note place='foot'>[The Bull <hi rend='italic'>Apostolicæ Sedis</hi>.&mdash;Cf. <hi rend='italic'>supr.</hi> pp. <ref target='Pg100'>100</ref>, 1, 5, 6.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> But the only relation of the Bishops to that
+Bull is as the suffering and punished party.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The third Solemn Session was to have been held on
+February 2, but had again to fall through from the
+want of any materials. And there are still mountains
+of work and numbers of elaborate <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> awaiting
+the Council; for the decrees it is summoned to make, or
+rather which Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> intends to proclaim to the world,
+<q>with the approbation of the Council,</q> are to be veritable
+pandects embracing the entire doctrine and constitution
+of the Church, regulating all relations between Church
+and State, and restoring the Papal supremacy over the
+bodies and souls of all men. The domain of morals, properly
+so called, is alone excluded; for there the Jesuits
+<pb n='210'/><anchor id='Pg210'/>
+have good reasons for wishing to keep their hands free.
+In short, the projected work that still remains to be done
+would occupy at least a year and a half. And for this
+end everything has been chosen and sharpened into the
+form of canons, which can only introduce complications,
+provoke conflicts with the civil Governments, embitter
+the relations of rival Confessions, prejudice the position
+of the Bishops, and foster the hatred of the lay
+world against the clergy. And accordingly, with many
+Bishops, the wish to escape taking any part in these
+discussions may be father to the thought, and a speedy
+end of the Council may appear to them a sort of conciliar
+euthanasia. To many a Bishop has the old proverb
+already occurred, in reference to the Council, that
+the best thing would be not to have been born and the
+next best to die early. It is not the Swiss only who
+have a home-sickness. And then there is the treatment;
+I heard a French Count here say to-day, <q>On
+les traite d'une manière brutale.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have just received the last number of the Paris
+<hi rend='italic'>Correspondant</hi>, with its article by the Viscount of Meaux,
+Montalembert's son-in-law, who is here. His account
+of how the Council is treated is so much to the point,
+and so thoroughly confirms my own statements, that I
+will quote it for you.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='211'/><anchor id='Pg211'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>The <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign>,</q> he says, at p. 347, <q>are prepared
+beforehand, the order of business is imposed by authority
+(<foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>imposée</foreign>), the Commissions are elected before any
+consultation, from official lists, by a disciplined majority
+which votes as one man. On these Commissions the
+minority is not represented, and there are no other
+deliberations except in Congregation. Before these
+Congregations the subjects are brought in all their
+novelty and laid before the 700 members, without any
+previous explanations. It is difficult to understand the
+speeches, and there are no reports which the Fathers
+can inspect, so that no Bishops have the opportunity of
+submitting their thoughts to the deliberate examination
+of their colleagues. Moreover, they are forbidden to
+have anything printed here for the Council. All these
+characteristics indicate an assembly summoned to
+approve, not to discuss, intended to exalt, not to moderate,
+the power which has summoned it. And with
+what haste does it push on in this direction! How impatiently
+does the majority press for a declaration of
+Papal Infallibility!</q> So far the Viscount. Matters
+must indeed have come to a pass when so cautious and
+strictly Catholic a journal as the <hi rend='italic'>Correspondant</hi> presents
+its readers with this picture of the Council.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='212'/><anchor id='Pg212'/>
+
+<p>
+There are two serious dangers to which we are always
+exposed. The first I have already spoken of, which is introducing
+the plan of passing the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> by majorities,
+so that the desired dogma would be carried as it were by
+assault. The second danger&mdash;and it seems to me far more
+threatening&mdash;is that one of those involved and disguised
+formulas which the Infallibilists vie with one another in
+devising, in order to deceive and catch the votes of the
+less sharp-sighted Prelates and thus incorporate it into
+the third <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, may really succeed with the greater
+number of the hitherto opposing and protesting Bishops.
+This notion is in fact implied in the phrase one has
+heard so often, that a middle party must be formed
+among the Bishops; for the programme or shibboleth
+of this middle party is to be an elastic formula, or one
+only expressing the thing metaphorically, or, again, one
+not sharply dogmatic but rather pious and edifying in
+sound. By the help of this middle party the formula
+might be made acceptable to the rest of the Prelates,
+and the desired end be happily attained. Thus Mermillod
+and two others have to-day invented a phrase,
+which seems to them suited to square the circle and to
+satisfy and unite all. They say they wish to declare
+that the Pope, whenever he speaks on doctrine,
+<pb n='213'/><anchor id='Pg213'/>
+speaks <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>tanquam os et organum Ecclesiæ</foreign>. And by this
+they understand that the Church has no other mouth
+than him and without him is dumb, from which it
+obviously follows that he is infallible. I doubt if
+many Bishops will be detained in the meshes of a
+net so coarsely spun. No better is the formula invented
+by Spalding, which might be called a pretty
+downright one,&mdash;that everybody must inwardly assent
+to every doctrinal decision of the Pope on pain of
+everlasting damnation.<note place='foot'><q>Damnamus perversas eorum cavillationes qui dicere audent externum
+quidem obsequium, non autem internum mentis cordisque assensum, R.
+Pontificis judiciis esse præstandum.</q></note> That goes far beyond even
+the Manning-Deschamps Address, which limits his infallibility
+to decrees addressed to the whole Church,
+while this formula of Spalding's declares every conceivable
+Papal utterance (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>judicium</foreign>) infallible; for a
+Christian can only give the assent of inward belief,
+when there is no possibility of error and when there
+is a really divine authority and revelation. Every
+theologian must declare this invention of the Archbishop
+of Baltimore's to be the most monstrous demand
+ever made on the conscience and understanding of the
+Catholic world. It is as if a courtier at Teheran were to
+say, <q>I will not indeed affirm that our Shah is almighty,
+<pb n='214'/><anchor id='Pg214'/>
+but I do assert confidently that he can create out of
+nothing whatever he will and that his will is always
+accomplished.</q> The reverend Fathers who torment
+themselves with inventing such devices would perhaps
+do best if they were to make a collection among themselves,
+and offer a prize of 100 ducats for that form of
+circumlocution or involution most securely adapted for
+entrapping the innocent souls of Bishops. Then the
+most ingenious heads from all Europe would compete
+in sending in their suggestions, and the right bait
+might be discovered among them.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='215'/><anchor id='Pg215'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Seventeenth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 5.</hi>&mdash;To supplement and partly to verify
+the news in my last letter, I will now tell you some
+facts that came to light yesterday and the day before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Opposition Addresses were presented to the Pope
+on January 26, subscribed by forty-six Germans and
+Hungarians, thirty French, and twenty Italian Bishops,
+together with some of the North American Bishops, the
+Portuguese, and certain others. Cardinal Barnabo had
+employed all available means of intimidation to prevent
+the Orientals from signing, and hence the number of
+signatures was somewhat below what had been expected.
+Of the Germans, Martin, Senestrey, Stahl and Leonrod
+had signed the Infallibilist Address, which, as was only
+afterwards discovered, has not been presented, because&mdash;it
+was countermanded. It is not, as I first informed
+you, composed by the Episcopal Committee, but by the
+<pb n='216'/><anchor id='Pg216'/>
+Jesuits, and emanates from the bureau of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>;
+the abiding marvel is that 400 Bishops could be induced
+to sign such a document without even verifying a single
+one of the pretended facts cited in it. That an Infallibilist
+should subscribe in blind confidence, and without
+examination, a document coming from the Pope
+himself, is natural; but that 400 pastors of the Church,
+assembled for deciding and therefore for examining
+ecclesiastical questions, should endorse on faith the
+composition of a nameless Jesuit, is an occurrence the
+Order may pride itself on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Petition has been set on foot by the Jesuits,
+and hawked about with the Pope's approval, proposing
+that the bodily Assumption of the Mother of
+the Lord should be made an article of faith, and all
+who henceforth doubt of it, or point to the notorious
+origin of the notion from apocryphal writings, be anathematized.
+This anathema would inevitably fall on
+every one who is acquainted with Church history
+and patristic literature. This passionate delight in
+anathemas, curses and refusals of absolution has been
+powerfully aroused, as you may see from the canons
+which reproduce the Syllabus and are added to the
+third <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>.
+<pb n='217'/><anchor id='Pg217'/>
+The augurs of the Gesù do not indeed smile, but simper,
+when they meet each other, for they know that the rich
+harvest from these seeds will drop into the bosom of
+their Order. Here again it is shown plainly that the
+interests of the Bishops and of the Jesuits are sharply
+opposed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That Bull, with its many curses and cases reserved
+to the Pope, which fills the Jesuits with hope and joy
+(though not they but the Dominicans of the Inquisition
+are its authors), is for the Bishops a source of discouragement
+and despair, so that the Bishop of Trent is said
+to have lately observed that he would rather resign his
+See than publish it. It is now asserted that the Pope
+has again suspended it, partly on account of remonstrances
+of the French Government, partly to put the
+Bishops in better humour for the Infallibilist definition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Petition for the new Marian dogma had 300 signatures
+on January 31. In managing such affairs the
+Jesuits are unrivalled, for the Order is like a great
+actor, such as Garrick, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, whose every limb from top
+to toe moves, speaks, and conspires to express the
+same idea. Then they have an Infallibilist Petition
+from the East, the only one known to have been got
+<pb n='218'/><anchor id='Pg218'/>
+up; that is to say, they made the Maronite boys and
+youths of their educational establishment sign the
+Petition they had drawn up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I now hear, the majority, on January 25, resolved
+to let their Address and Petition drop, if the minority
+will accept Spalding's proposed addition to the third
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>. They are indeed very magnanimous, for
+that addition, as was observed just now, goes much
+further and stands to the Address somewhat as Dido's
+ox-hide cut up into thongs to the hide before it was
+cut: it will embrace whole countries and cities. Spalding
+desires too to have the Index placed completely
+under the shield of Papal Infallibility, and therefore
+the opinion that the Pope can have made any mistake
+about the sense of a book is to be condemned.
+Next day, the Petition of the minority, who knew
+nothing of the decision of the other party, was presented
+to the Pope and rejected by him. The
+Infallibilists appear to have spread the report that
+their Address had been actually given in simply
+for the purpose of catching their opponents in a
+trap.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Sunday, January 23, the Commission named by
+the Pope for examining motions proposed held its first
+<pb n='219'/><anchor id='Pg219'/>
+sitting, under the presidency of Cardinal Patrizzi and
+not of the Pope himself, as was thought&mdash;seven weeks
+after the Council met and when a number of motions
+had long been awaiting its scrutiny. This delay had
+evidently been designed. It has now been resolved to
+arrange and examine proposals, not according to subjects
+but nations, so that the proposals of the French,
+Germans, etc., will be separately discussed and decided
+upon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Rauscher has written, or got written, a
+treatise on the Infallibility question in German, which
+is now being translated into Latin, and which does not
+merely oppose the dogma as inopportune, but attacks
+the whole principle and, as I am assured, on fundamental
+grounds. But it cannot be printed here, where
+the Roman censorship is constantly growing stricter.
+It will be printed in Vienna, and copies will then have
+to be sent here under cover to the Austrian Embassy.
+To the representations of the German and French
+Bishops against the oppressiveness and injustice to the
+minority of the order of business, the Pope has not
+seen fit to make any reply. <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Væ victis!</foreign> Woe to them
+who do not belong to the faithful and devoted majority!
+This is what resounds here, morning, noon and night.
+<pb n='220'/><anchor id='Pg220'/>
+Meanwhile the Papal Committee of the Council has
+devised a new means for paralysing the minority, and
+cutting short discussions which might easily become
+inconvenient. It is directed that all objections or proposals
+for modifications of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> are first to be
+handed over in writing to the Presidents and referred
+by them to the Commission <hi rend='italic'>de Fide</hi>, which rejects or
+admits them at its pleasure. If the authors of the
+proposals appeal against the decision of the Commission,
+the whole Council decides, of course by simple
+majority of votes. If this arrangement were really to
+be introduced, the minority&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the German and
+French Bishops&mdash;would be deprived of all possibility
+of exerting any influence on the composition of the
+decrees or warding off any decree they considered
+injurious; they would always be outvoted, and the
+Council would more and more take the form of a mere
+machine for outvoting them. The Bishops would soon
+learn to spare themselves the useless trouble of proposing
+changes, and a much closer approach would be effected
+to the great object of making new articles of faith and
+decrees by a mere majority of votes. The only question
+is what the French and Germans intend to put up
+<pb n='221'/><anchor id='Pg221'/>
+with from the Italians and Spaniards, for it is clear
+that here again the question of nationalities turns up
+in the background, and the Brennus sword of the
+Southern and Latin majority is always ready to be
+thrown into the scale.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='222'/><anchor id='Pg222'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Eighteenth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 6.</hi>&mdash;The report of the dissolution or
+prorogation of the Council gains in strength. Manning
+has found it important enough to have it contradicted in
+his journal, the <hi rend='italic'>Tablet</hi>. He writes, or makes somebody
+write, <q>The Holy Father is full of strength and confidence,
+and has no intention of proroguing the Council,
+as his enemies say.</q> As far as the Pope is concerned,
+I hold the statement to be true. Pius is still absolutely
+confident of success and firmly convinced of two
+things&mdash;<emph>first</emph>, of his divine, legitimate and irresistible
+fulness of power, which requires that a conspicuous
+example, memorable for all future ages, shall be made
+of the Bishops who oppose him; <emph>secondly</emph>, of the
+special protecting grace and guidance accorded to the
+Council by the Holy Virgin, on whose benevolence
+he notoriously maintains that he has very special
+<pb n='223'/><anchor id='Pg223'/>
+claims. He has issued an Indulgence for the whole
+Church, which gives us some insight into his connection
+of ideas and religious views. In the Bull of
+December 1869, he says that the Dominican General,
+Jandel, has represented to him that the new method of
+prayer, consisting of 150 repetitions of the <q>Hail,
+Mary,</q> was first introduced at the time the grand
+crusade against the Albigenses was organized. But
+our own age is infected with so many monstrous errors
+that this new method of prayer should be employed
+now also, in order that under the mighty protection
+of the Mother of God the Council may destroy these
+monsters. Whoever, therefore, after confession and
+communion, recites the Rosary daily for a week, for
+the Pope's intention and for the happy termination of
+the Council, may gain a plenary indulgence of all his
+sins, applicable also to the dead. The Pope adds
+that even when a child, and far more as Pope, he has
+always placed his whole confidence in the Mother of God,
+and that he firmly believes it to be given to her alone
+by God to destroy all heresies throughout the world.
+How this special power of the Holy Virgin consists
+with the fact that many heresies have now lasted
+quietly for fourteen centuries, it would be interesting
+<pb n='224'/><anchor id='Pg224'/>
+to know. The rest the reader may find himself in the
+German Pastorals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pius has even had his naïve but robust belief in his
+own heavenly illumination and vocation to proclaim
+new doctrines sensibly embodied in a picture. In a
+chamber beyond the Raphael Gallery there is a picture
+painted by his order; he stands in glorified attitude
+on a throne proclaiming his favourite dogma of the
+Immaculate Conception, while the Divine Trinity and
+the Holy Virgin look down from heaven well pleased
+upon him, and from the Cross, borne in the arms of an
+angel, flashes a bright ray on his countenance. Thus
+Pius stands in a special mystical relation to Mary; she
+guides and inspires the Council through him, and he
+in turn will proclaim, with its assent, the decrees she
+has inspired and which will destroy the monstrous
+errors of the present day, or will at least give them
+a fatal blow. Unfortunately, not one single decree
+has yet been brought out after exactly two months, and
+all the heresies continue just as strong as before the
+Council met. And yet the pregnant and successful
+Councils of the ancient Church did not require a longer
+time for their decisions; the Council of Nice was
+finished in two months, the Council of Chalcedon in
+<pb n='225'/><anchor id='Pg225'/>
+six weeks. Certainly it was not then supposed that
+Mary had first to give the Pope, and then he to give
+the Council, the weapons for destroying heresies: they
+were content to rely on the Paraclete promised by Christ.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the present assembly has nothing in
+common with those ancient Synods, except in being
+composed of persons called Bishops. But our Bishops
+are unlike those of the ancient Church, for they have
+to yield up to the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> three-fourths of the rights possessed
+by their predecessors, and it would be simply
+ridiculous to liken the state of tutelage and restraint
+they are now placed under by the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> to the free
+and independent attitude of the fifth-century Councils.
+The more free-spoken among them have just addressed,
+on 2d February, another Petition to the Pope, requesting
+that the so-called Council Hall in St. Peter's may
+be exchanged for a more suitable chamber; for now
+that serious discussions on the dogmas and decrees are
+to begin&mdash;and the third <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> will be met with
+strong and persevering opposition in many of its
+articles&mdash;the present arrangement becomes still more
+intolerable than before. Any regular discussion is
+simply impossible in the present Council Hall; there
+is no doubt of that. <q>That is just right,</q> say the Papal
+<pb n='226'/><anchor id='Pg226'/>
+officials; <q>we neither desire nor need discussion, but
+simply that the propositions should be voted.</q> <q>But
+this is an unheard-of thing, against all conciliar usage
+and all natural right,</q> reply the Bishops. Archbishop
+Darboy said, <q>We are called on to anathematize doctrines
+and persons; to pass sentences of spiritual death. But
+would any jury in the world pronounce capital sentence
+without first having heard the defence?</q> And
+thus the Council has entered on a very critical period,
+and a spirit of irritation is becoming visible, increased
+by the constantly deepening conviction that the Bishops
+are to be used for purposes alien to their minds and
+suicidal. One word describes the entire plot&mdash;outvoting
+by majorities. The united German, French
+and North American Bishops are opposed to a well
+disciplined army of about 500, who will vote as one
+man at the beck of the Pope. This army consists
+of 300 Papal boarders, the 62 Bishops of the Roman
+States who are doubly subject to him, 68 Neapolitans,
+80 of the Spanish race, some 110 titular Bishops without
+dioceses, the Italian Cardinals, 30 Generals of
+Orders, etc.<note place='foot'>It will of course be understood that the 300 boarders (cf. <hi rend='italic'>supr.</hi> p. <ref target='Pg128'>128</ref>)
+are divided among the Prelates mentioned above.</note> In a word, the Latin South is arrayed
+<pb n='227'/><anchor id='Pg227'/>
+against the French and German North. And therefore
+the design of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, to carry decrees or dogmas on
+every question of Church and State, etc., by a mere
+calculation of <emph>plus</emph> and <emph>minus</emph>, is doubly monstrous and
+utterly unchurchlike. For, <emph>first</emph>, it must inevitably
+produce a deep national irritation, if it is said hereafter
+in Germany, Bohemia, Hungary, France and the United
+States, <q>The Italians and Spaniards have triumphed over
+our views and interests at Rome, simply because
+their dioceses are much smaller than ours and they
+have 50 Bishops for 100,000 souls, while we have only
+one.</q> <emph>Secondly</emph>, it involves a complete break with the
+past of the Church and the practice of Councils.
+Some Bishops have examined the official records of the
+Council of Trent by the Roman historian Pallavicini,
+and have found there that Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> directed his Legates&mdash;and
+that too with special reference to a decree on the
+fulness of Papal jurisdiction&mdash;to make no decrees the
+Bishops were not <emph>unanimously agreed upon</emph>.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Istoria del Concilio de Trente</hi>, xix. 15. 3: <q>Facendosi quelle sole
+difinizioni nelle quali i padri conspirassero ad un parere.</q></note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But now just the contrary is to take place. The
+decisive contest on that point&mdash;if it comes to an open
+contest&mdash;will not be fought on the third <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, <hi rend='italic'>On
+<pb n='228'/><anchor id='Pg228'/>
+the Church and the Pope</hi>, but at once on the first <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>,
+the handiwork of the Jesuits, when it is returned to
+the Council, professedly modified but in substance
+unchanged, from the Commission of two Jesuits and
+three Infallibilists. As we hear, no attention has been
+paid to the counter representations of the Bishops,
+some of whom have objected to it altogether as superfluous
+and mischievous, some as erroneous and exaggerated.
+It will now without further discussion, which
+is simply impossible in the Council Hall, be accepted
+by the mere majority of votes of the compact troop of
+Infallibilists, who are at the Pope's command as <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>valets
+à tout faire</foreign>, and proclaimed as a dogma by Pius,
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>approbante Concilio</foreign>, as the form runs. Thereby, according
+to approved Roman doctrine, has the Holy Ghost
+spoken by the mouth of His divine representative,
+<q>causa finita est;</q> and it only remains for the 150 or
+200 opposing Bishops to make all haste to perform a
+great mental evolution, to change their laws of thought,
+to reverence as revealed truth what they have hitherto
+rejected as error, and to force the clergy and laity under
+them by excommunication and suspension to perform
+the same gymnastic feat of leaping at one jump from
+unbelief into firm and immoveable faith.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='229'/><anchor id='Pg229'/>
+
+<p>
+The modern and purely mechanical scholasticism has
+brought matters to such a pass that many seriously
+look upon the Council as a machine, which only needs
+turning to get new dogmas carried and authorized by
+the Holy Ghost. Formerly, theologians used to say
+that the voice of a General Council is nothing but the
+voice of the whole Church concentrated in one place;
+that every Bishop bears witness to the traditional belief
+of his Church and of his predecessors; and that the
+harmony of these testimonies proves what is the universal
+belief, and thus attests the truth and purity of
+the profession of faith sanctioned by the Council. But
+now all this is entirely changed. The Bishops have
+come, without any previous knowledge as to what they
+were to vote about; long-winded and ready-made documents
+are laid before them on questions most of them
+have never examined in their lives, of which their
+flocks at home know nothing and have never heard;
+they are expected to pass decrees the necessity and
+opportuneness of which appear to them highly problematical,
+and to pronounce a string of anathemas,
+because the Pope and Jesuits will it. They are cooped
+up in a treadmill called a Council, and must willingly
+or unwillingly grind what is thrown into it. It cannot
+<pb n='230'/><anchor id='Pg230'/>
+indeed be exactly said that this procedure is new and
+unprecedented, for the same thing occurred, on a much
+smaller scale, at the Fifth Lateran Council under Julius
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi> and Leo. <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi>; but then only the Italian Bishops were
+made use of, who had long been broken in to the <foreign rend='italic'>rôle</foreign>
+of flunkeys. Now, on the contrary, the Bishops of all
+nations have been brought into prison at Rome, and
+are to say Yea and Amen to the decrees the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and
+the Jesuits have drawn up and mean to make obligatory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the minority have taken courage, and stand on
+the defensive; and so the machine is at a standstill.
+The opponents of Infallibilism have not decreased; on
+the contrary, it is now thought that about 200 will vote
+against it. Many, who at first were only <q>inopportunists,</q>
+have now through more careful investigation
+of the question become decided opponents of the doctrine
+itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Antonelli does not spare assurances, that the Governments
+may be quite at ease as to the decrees to be
+issued by the Council; he says they only affect theology,
+that nothing will be changed in practical life by them,
+and that the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> has no intention of employing them
+for the purpose of interfering with political affairs.
+But these reassuring declarations are only made orally;
+<pb n='231'/><anchor id='Pg231'/>
+great care is taken to avoid putting them into a written,
+and therefore binding, form. Meanwhile the French
+Government perfectly comprehends the situation and the
+objects aimed at, and has already announced that it
+will fully support its Bishops and protect them against
+the threatened domination by majorities. Archbishop
+Lavigerie has gained nothing in Paris, and the decision
+of France has been communicated to the Cardinal
+Secretary of State, to the effect that the Government
+will not allow the 33 French Bishops and their allies
+of the German and English tongue to be crushed and
+forced into adopting dogmas they have rejected. The
+<hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> has just been singing the praises of Count Daru,
+who is a living proof that there are still real statesmen;
+it will very soon adopt just the opposite tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the points which make the Bishops the more
+astonished, the longer they stay here and the more
+narrowly they inspect the condition of things, is the
+decline of study in Rome, and the want, not merely of
+learned men but even, and most especially, of well-grounded
+theologians. Rome was never a favourable
+soil for serious study and true learning; a resource
+was found in attracting foreigners here, which could
+easily be done by means of the great Religious Orders
+<pb n='232'/><anchor id='Pg232'/>
+whose Generals reside here. But now these Orders,
+with the exception of the Jesuits, are in the same
+state of decay. Where are men of distinguished learning
+to be found among the Dominicans, Carmelites,
+Cistercians and Franciscans of our own day? To the
+Pope himself and those immediately about him this is
+a matter of indifference; Pius feels instinctively that,
+if there were real theologians at Rome, they would all
+offer at least a passive resistance to his <emph>penchant</emph> for
+creating new dogmas. Only the Jesuits and their
+pupils favour that sort of thing; and as long as there
+were real theologians in Rome, history knows of no
+Pope who was possessed with this abnormal passion for
+fabricating dogmas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, indeed, among the 41 Italian Cardinals, only
+two are named as theologians, the Thomist Guidi and
+the Barnabite Lulio. Of the achievements of the
+latter nothing is known, and he has left the Jesuits to
+their own devices in the elaboration of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign>;
+but in the Council he is the chief representative of
+Roman theology. More distinguished than Lulio is the
+Piedmontese Prelate and Professor, Audisio, author of
+a History of the Popes, which of course cannot be
+measured by a German standard. Vincenzi, a good
+<pb n='233'/><anchor id='Pg233'/>
+Orientalist and author of a learned&mdash;but in the main
+erroneous&mdash;apology for Origen, being a quiet, modest
+man who goes his own way, is thought nothing of
+here, and has neither title, dignities, nor benefices,
+although in knowledge he outweighs twenty Monsignori.
+De Rossi, the most acute and learned among
+the genuine Romans, who has educated himself by the
+study of German works, is a layman and therefore
+cannot be anything. The Dominican Modena, Secretary
+of the Congregation of the Index and as such
+director of the whole institution, who died a few weeks
+ago, passed here for a learned theologian, but no
+monuments of his knowledge and research are extant
+outside the Index. When a foreigner observed to him
+shortly before his death that, in order to condemn
+German or English books, one should understand something
+of the language, he showed great surprise at so
+unheard-of a demand, and replied that for Italians,
+who notoriously far excel all nations in genius and
+acuteness, if a foreigner translated a couple of passages
+from a book into Latin or Italian, that supplied quite
+enough materials for pronouncing a censure on the
+book. The Dominican Gatti has now succeeded
+Modena as Secretary of the Index, and therefore as
+<pb n='234'/><anchor id='Pg234'/>
+supreme judge <hi rend='italic'>ex officio</hi> of the literature of the world.
+On his scientific capacity and literary achievements
+history is silent. And so the few learned works produced
+here have to be provided by foreigners domiciled
+at Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Theiner publishes documents from the Archives, so
+far, that is, as they serve <q>the good cause;</q> much he
+is notoriously forbidden to publish. The French
+Benedictine, Pitra, now a Cardinal, edits the original
+documents of Greek canon law; the French Chaillot
+writes the single important Church journal or record,
+<hi rend='italic'>Analecta Juris Pontificii</hi>, where, notwithstanding its
+rigid Ultramontane line, useful collections or ancient
+treatises not previously printed may here and there
+be found. Dogmatics and theological philosophy&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>,
+philosophy adapted to dogmatic needs and ends&mdash;are
+provided here by the three German Jesuits, Schrader,
+Franzelin and Kleutgen. For here Germans are only
+thought available when they have first been transformed
+into Jesuits and thereby, as far as possible, un-Germanized.
+That Order, on which the features of the
+Spanish national character of the sixteenth century are
+still indelibly impressed, cannot tolerate a genuine German
+in his natural shape; it would be compelled to eject
+<pb n='235'/><anchor id='Pg235'/>
+him as Etna vomited out the brazen slipper of Empedocles.
+It is well known that the most industrious
+and learned of the Roman Prelates, Liverani, was
+obliged to leave Rome; he lives, I believe, at Florence.<note place='foot'>[Liverani published a striking pamphlet on the abuses of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+some years ago.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If we examine the names of the Professors at the
+Roman University of the Sapienza, we find among the
+teachers of theology, with the solitary exception of
+the Canon-Regular, Tizzani, who is now blind, only
+monks&mdash;Dominicans, Carmelites and Augustinians&mdash;and
+these mere names wholly unknown beyond the
+walls of Rome. No less lamentable is the view presented
+by the philosophical, mathematical and philological
+departments. The best that can be said of this
+University, the intellectual metropolis of 180,000,000,
+is about this, <q>que c'est une fille honnête qui ne fait
+pas parler d'elle.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the whole, the air here is much too raw, the
+soil inhospitable, the Index too near, and the censorship
+too merciless, for scientific works and serious investigations.
+The Italians say of a mindless work,
+<q>É scritto in tempo di Scirocco.</q> And here there is an
+intellectual scirocco established in permanence. And
+<pb n='236'/><anchor id='Pg236'/>
+thus the brave German Benedictines, who assembled
+here some years ago under an Italian Abbot, Pescetelli,
+in St. Paul's without the Walls, have become
+victims of the unhealthy atmosphere&mdash;that is, besides
+the mental scirocco indigenous here, the sharp north
+wind blowing from the Gesù. They had energetic
+men among them, such as Nickes and others, were
+anxious to work in German fashion, and made a good
+beginning in a volume of <hi rend='italic'>Voices from Rome</hi>, published
+in 1860; a German Cardinal was their protector. But
+no sooner had they been denounced to the Pope by the
+Jesuits&mdash;German and of ill-repute for orthodoxy are
+synonymous terms here than they had to decamp.
+The Abbot, weary of these chicaneries, resigned his
+office and returned to Montecassino. But the Benedictines
+generally are looked on most unfavourably by
+the authorities here. As it was said in a capital
+sentence at Paris, in 1794, that the condemned man
+was <q>suspected of being suspected of deficient sense
+of citizenship,</q> so must it be said of the Benedictines
+here that they <q>are suspected of being suspected of
+a deficient sense of Papalism.</q> They are not devoted
+enough towards the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>; these little religious communities
+cannot be so entirely kept in hand, the
+<pb n='237'/><anchor id='Pg237'/>
+Jesuits from of old are hostile to them, and it is found
+in Rome that they have not hitherto rendered sufficient
+service to the great cause of strengthening Roman
+domination. They are therefore to be revolutionized,
+and, like the Jesuits and the Mendicant Orders, to
+receive a monarchical constitution. Their autocratic
+General will then reside in Rome, and the Pope will
+do with them what he did with the Dominicans, when
+he made Jandel, the Jesuit pupil, their General. Then
+the Benedictines will be for the Jesuits what the
+Gibeonites were for the Israelites, their <q>hewers of
+wood and drawers of water.</q><note place='foot'>Joshua ix. 21.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such a project for revolutionizing the Benedictines,
+who would then of course cease to be sons of St. Benedict,
+is reputed to be among the measures prepared for
+the Council. If the present condition of Rome be compared
+with earlier ages, as late as Benedict <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi>'s reign,
+or even twenty or thirty years later, there is truly an
+enormous difference, and this deep decay and intellectual
+collapse cannot be explained by external causes
+merely; inward and more hidden motives must be
+taken into account, which I think I well understand,
+but will not here speak of. That does not trouble our
+<pb n='238'/><anchor id='Pg238'/>
+Roman clergy of to-day; they institute no comparisons,
+and don't even know the names of the men who dwelt
+in the same spot a century ago. And the thought of
+their own poverty of intellect and culture, if it ever
+occurs to the Roman clerisy, does not at all hinder
+their always admiring themselves, like Dante's Rachel,
+</p>
+
+<quote rend='display'>
+<lg>
+<l rend='margin-left: 8'><q rend='pre'>Mai non si smaga</q></l>
+<l>Dal suo miraglio, e siedo tutto giorno</l>
+<l><q rend='post'>Ell' é de' suoi begli occhi veder vaga.</q><note place='foot'>Purgat. xxvii. 104.</note></l>
+</lg>
+</quote>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='239'/><anchor id='Pg239'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Nineteenth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 8, 1870.</hi>&mdash;It is a most exciting drama that
+is being exhibited here, and notwithstanding much that
+is both little and painful in its details, one of great and
+moving import; and those who have the opportunity of
+inspecting its machinery more narrowly, can hardly at
+times avoid feeling very strongly on the subject. The
+figure of Laocoon, with the snakes coiled round him, is
+constantly recurring to my mind; for I seem to be
+witnessing the strategical arts and skilful evolutions of
+a general, who is trying to surround a little band of
+opponents with his immensely superior forces, so as to
+compel them to lay down their arms and surrender at
+discretion without striking a blow. The disproportion
+is indeed enormous; first there is the Pope, whose mere
+name still is a host in itself, and that Pope is Pius,
+who for twenty-four years has had such homage and
+flatteries heaped upon him as no Pope ever had before,
+<pb n='240'/><anchor id='Pg240'/>
+and who is accustomed to shake the Roman Olympus
+by his nod. Then there are the Cardinals and Prelates,
+the whole spiritual staff of Congregations&mdash;the Papal
+family&mdash;all fully united and resolved, and the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>contribuens
+plebs</foreign> of foreign Bishops, who are fairly caught in
+the net, and will not be suffered to escape without the
+bonds and chains of the most stringent decrees securing
+their obedience. On the other side stand from 150 to
+200 Bishops, of divers tongues and nations and now for
+the first time united by a common need and a common
+danger, like a snowball liable to melt at the first breath
+of milder air, and fighting like those Spaniards of the
+Cortes, who, with one foot chained to a stone, compelled
+the Mexicans to spare their lives. One asks every
+morning in doubt and terror, how far the solvents employed
+have attained their end? Many would gladly
+capitulate if only they were met half-way by tolerable
+conditions, and such would secure them a rather less cold
+reception on their return to their dioceses. Meanwhile
+the eyes and the hopes of all educated Catholics, not
+only in Germany but in Italy, France and North
+America, are fixed on the chosen band of 300 Bishops.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But how are matters likely to proceed? The Opposition
+is tough and tenacious. Every new <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> bears
+<pb n='241'/><anchor id='Pg241'/>
+so unmistakeably the impress of the interests of either
+the Jesuits or the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, that the Bishops cannot help
+growing constantly more cautious, suspicious and reserved.
+And to make their designs still clearer, the
+Jesuits supply the practical commentary in their official
+journal, the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, to the effect that no measures of the
+Governments against the encroachments of the Church
+on the civil jurisdiction, or her summons to transgress
+the laws of the country, would bind the consciences of
+their subjects. The subjoined anathema against every
+one who refuses to acknowledge that laws are annulled
+by the ordinances of the Church (<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the Pope),
+is a sorry consolation for the Bishops; for experience
+has shown too often that courts of justice and
+statesmen don't trouble themselves about the excommunications
+incurred in the discharge of their official
+duties. The Bishops accordingly foresee nothing but endless
+rubs and collisions with the civil power, as well as
+with whole classes of the population at home; and
+when the Jesuits are commended to them as pledged
+and triumphant allies in the contest to be waged against
+Governments, constitutions and laws, they generally
+shake their heads suspiciously and with no particular
+feeling of triumphant joy.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='242'/><anchor id='Pg242'/>
+
+<p>
+The Pope's 300 episcopal foster-sons cost him 25,000
+francs daily, and that makes the pleasant little sum of
+1,500,000 francs for two sterile months, during which
+these doughty warriors have sat a good deal, but accomplished
+nothing by their sitting; for the old Roman
+proverb, <q>Romanus vincit sedendo,</q> has not been
+verified here. The Pope is gradually getting frightened
+at this daily expenditure, and, after the fashion of great
+lords, who readily lay the blame of the failure of their
+own plans on the bad advice of their subjects, he said
+to-day, in an outbreak of disgust, <q>per furia di farmi
+infallibile, mi faranno fallire.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The proceedings of the Council must therefore be
+expedited and curtailed. At the same time nothing
+must be remitted of the matters it is to deal with and
+vote into canons and decrees. Therefore the order of
+business must be changed. Cardinal Antonelli says
+now that <q>the speeches have been too long and too
+many, and must be entirely put an end to; the
+Bishops must be content with handing over their observations
+in writing to the Commission of twenty-four
+or the Commission for Petitions.</q> He tries to sweeten
+the bitter draught to their lips by remarking that this
+decision is for their own advantage, for, after being so
+<pb n='243'/><anchor id='Pg243'/>
+wearied out with the long sittings and listening to
+speeches, they must be glad to be relieved of the burden.
+The Bishops, however, experience no such joyful feeling,
+but say that the last vestige of conciliar freedom is
+now abolished. They have the more reason for saying
+so, since it is notorious that the Infallibilist
+and purely Romanist party is exclusively represented
+on the Commissions, so that it may be clearly foreseen
+that the remarks and suggestions of the liberal-minded
+and reforming Bishops will simply be
+thrown into the waste-paper basket, or, under the
+most favourable circumstances, be buried in the archives
+of St. Angelo. At the moment I am writing the new
+<foreign rend='italic'>Regolamento</foreign> has not yet been published, owing to the
+urgent requests and representations of certain Bishops.
+But to judge from Antonelli's statement, the authorities
+seem determined to drop the last veil, and show quite
+openly to the world that the Council has been arranged
+as a mere machine of Roman administration, and must
+therefore of course be forced back into the path from
+which it had wandered. Many a Bishop now looks
+back with painful regret to the Council of Trent, where,
+notwithstanding the haughty insolence of the Italians,
+the ambassadors of Spain and France acted as protectors
+<pb n='244'/><anchor id='Pg244'/>
+to the foreign Prelates, and were a great check on the
+arbitrary violence of the Legates. Now, Antonelli
+assures every diplomatist who says a word on the unprecedented
+method of procedure, and the hostile character
+of the proposed decrees towards the State, that
+these things have only a theoretical and doctrinal
+significance, and that in practice the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> will study
+a wise moderation, and place itself on a friendly footing
+with the Governments. He means, that when one
+fills one's arsenal with new and effective weapons, that
+is no proof that they will at once be discharged. I
+don't know whether this satisfies the diplomatists.
+Perhaps Count Trautmansdorff is satisfied, for his
+Government has repeatedly announced its resolve to
+wait quietly till the Council is over and the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> is
+put in possession of all the decrees and dogmas it
+wants. Then, when the new doctrines are already
+inserted in all the catechisms and taught in all seminaries
+and enforced in every confessional, it will be time
+enough to consider what line the civil power should
+take in the matter. M. de Banneville and the Paris
+Government do not seem to be of this opinion. I don't
+imagine they are minded at Paris so entirely to sacrifice
+the Bishops to the arbitrary will of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and its
+<pb n='245'/><anchor id='Pg245'/>
+paid majority, and for the last few days the French
+ambassador has been engaged in a lively telegraphic
+correspondence with his own Government. We may
+very soon expect important disclosures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As far as I can make out, the conviction still prevails
+among the Roman clergy and their episcopal
+allies that the dogma of Infallibility in the third
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> will be accepted by the Council, at least in a
+somewhat modified form, but one easily capable of
+being extended and quite sufficient for present exigencies.
+They say, <q>We will first take the vote on the
+question of opportuneness, and a mere majority may very
+well decide that. It has decided already by the 400
+or 410 signatures to the (Infallibilist) Address, and the
+Bishops who have themselves answered No, will be
+obliged to yield to this decision, and so to come to
+the vote on the dogma itself, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, to declare whether
+they personally hold the Pope to be dogmatically
+fallible or infallible.</q> The Romans expect that, when
+matters have come to this point, not a few Bishops&mdash;especially
+Ketteler of Mayence, and, it may be hoped,
+many more with him&mdash;will come over to their side and
+profess their faith in Papal Infallibility. In whatever
+form they clothe their belief, it comes to the same thing
+<pb n='246'/><anchor id='Pg246'/>
+in the end. At last there will only remain a little band of
+obstinate Prelates who will protest. They may talk if
+they please, and then it will be proclaimed to the world,
+by an overwhelming majority of perhaps 700 votes,
+that it has become Infallibilist. Then might a new St.
+Jerome say, with greater force than the former one said
+of Arianism, <q>Miratus est orbis se esse factum infallibilistam.</q>
+A Roman clergyman, who expressed this
+expectation to me with peculiar confidence, added that
+there had been a like occurrence at the Council of
+Trent and it would now be repeated. I perfectly
+understood him, and the matter deserves to be mentioned
+here as a striking parallel to certain recurring
+possibilities. The Council, which was meant to reform
+and thereby to save the Church, was brought to an early
+consideration of the universal neglect of Bishops to
+reside in their dioceses and the need for recognising
+this duty as one of Divine obligation. But it appeared
+at once, in the first period of the Council, that the
+Court of Rome and its faithful Italians in the assembly
+had the strongest interest in preventing the assertion
+of this simple and logically necessary truth. For, as
+regards the past, it would have implied severe censure
+of the practice followed by the Popes since the beginning
+<pb n='247'/><anchor id='Pg247'/>
+of the thirteenth century, which would be shown
+to be a constant violation of the Divine law; while,
+in regard to the present and future, it would have
+seriously limited the plenary power of the Popes, for
+it was always held a principle in the Church that no
+one could dispense from the law of God. But the
+non-Italian Bishops, and nearly all the Italians themselves,
+were at first in favour of declaring it to be <q>the
+Divine law,</q> so strong was the evidence. And it was
+seen clearly enough that from the divinely imposed obligation
+must again be inferred the equally divine rights
+and institution of the episcopate. Meanwhile the Jesuit
+General made his two famous speeches to show that
+all episcopal authority was a mere emanation from the
+Pope. For ten months, from September 18, 1562 to
+July 14, 1563, all sessions of the Council had to be
+suspended to prevent any decree being made on the
+subject; and at last, on July 14, 1563, the twenty-eight
+Spanish Bishops and <q>the Divine right of residence</q>
+succumbed to the majority of 192 votes, about
+three-fourths being Italians. <foreign rend='italic'>Absit omen!</foreign>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> of February 5, 1870, in its article, <q>I
+Politicastri ed il Concilio,</q> has supplied a noteworthy
+commentary on the canons or decrees of the third
+<pb n='248'/><anchor id='Pg248'/>
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, which affirm the Church to be an institution
+armed with coercive powers of inflicting bodily punishments;
+for that is obviously the meaning. The <q>Politicastri</q>
+are those statesmen who imagine that the State
+has a sphere of its own, independent of the legislation
+of the Church and the interposition of the Pope. That,
+according to the Roman Jesuits, is a most abominable
+error. A law which contradicts a law of the Church
+has not the slightest validity for men's consciences.
+For the authority of a Council&mdash;and <foreign rend='italic'>a fortiori</foreign> of a
+Pope, from whom, on the Jesuit theory, Councils derive
+all their force and validity&mdash;is above the authority of
+the State.<note place='foot'><q>Ove accadesse collisione tra le definizioni del Concilio ecumenico e le
+leggi dello Stato, queste cesserebbero per ciò solo di avere <emph>qualsiasi</emph> vigore
+obbligatorio,</q> p. 262.</note> Should the State therefore require obedience
+to a law opposed to an ordinance of the Council,
+it would do so without any real right (<foreign lang='it' rend='italic'>senza vero titulo
+giuridico</foreign>), and, should it enforce compliance, would be
+introducing a suicidal tyranny. It is further explained
+that this by no means applies to those religious laws
+only which rest on Divine ordinance, but also to those
+which are purely ecclesiastical, and therefore on Catholic
+principles are variable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let us take the twelfth of the <hi rend='italic'>Canones de Ecclesiâ</hi>,
+<pb n='249'/><anchor id='Pg249'/>
+which anathematizes all who doubt the Church's power
+to inflict corporal punishment; and consider further
+that the Popes have most solemnly declared that by
+baptism all heretics are become their subjects, are
+amenable to the laws of the Church, and must, if
+needful, be compelled to obey them.<note place='foot'>So Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi>, in his Brief of 1791, directed against the new laws of the
+French Assembly for securing religions freedom. Therein the distinction is
+still drawn between heathen and Jews on one side and Protestants or heretics
+on the other, that the former cannot be compelled to receive baptism,
+but the others, <q>qui se Ecclesiæ per susceptum Baptismi Sacramentum
+subjecerunt, cogendi sunt</q> (<hi rend='italic'>Collect. Brev. Pii VI.</hi>, Aug. Vindel. 1791, i. 34).
+Benedict <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi> declared the same before in 1749 (<hi rend='italic'>Bullar. Mag.</hi>, Romæ, ed.
+Coquel, T. xvii. p. 272). And Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi> afterwards, in his Brief of 1803
+(Kopp, <hi rend='italic'>Die kath. Kirche des 19 Jahrh.</hi>, Mainz, 1830, p. 429). <q>According
+to Scripture, Councils and Tradition, heretics remain subject to the
+laws of the Catholic Church.</q></note> Consider further
+that the Syllabus condemns the toleration or equality
+of different religions, and no doubt can remain as
+to what system it is intended to introduce.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The second Letter of the famous Oratorian and member
+of the French Academy, Father Gratry, has just come
+here, and has produced a great impression. It treats
+of the gross forgeries by which the way for the introduction
+of the doctrine of Papal Infallibility has been
+gradually prepared, first in the ninth and then in the
+thirteenth century; and dwells especially on the fact that
+the theologians&mdash;above all Thomas Aquinas, who rules
+<pb n='250'/><anchor id='Pg250'/>
+in the schools, and his many disciples and followers&mdash;were
+deceived by these fabrications, and that even the
+Popes themselves were misled by them. Gratry's exposition
+is clear and convincing; but he goes beyond the
+middle ages. He shows how dishonestly the Breviary
+was tampered with at Rome at the end of the sixteenth
+century, and how, up to the present time the Jesuits,
+Perrone and Wenninger,&mdash;the latter in a truly amazing
+fashion&mdash;have followed the practice of citing fabulous
+or corrupted testimonies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One grand result of the Council its authors have not
+foreseen or reckoned upon, which, however, has already
+attained alarming dimensions; I mean the scandal it
+has given. They seem to have really believed with a
+childish <foreign rend='italic'>naïveté</foreign> that the Council could be hermetically
+sealed up, like birds under a glass bell, and its members
+shut up apart,&mdash;that 3000 persons could be reduced
+to silence by a Papal edict about matters they feel there
+is the strongest necessity for speaking of. Such a
+notion could only grow up in the heads of Roman
+clerics, who are wont to look at the world beyond their
+own narrow sphere only through crevices of the open
+door, or through the key-hole. Only too much has become
+known. The Jesuits, the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>, the
+<pb n='251'/><anchor id='Pg251'/>
+<hi rend='italic'>Monde, et id genus omne</hi>, have done their best to reveal
+the sharp contrast of opposite parties, and the world of
+to-day, sceptically disposed as it is and little inclined to
+cover the shame and nakedness by turning away its face,
+is present at a double spectacle: it witnesses the system
+of force and intrigue by which a Council is managed,
+and it watches with keen observation the process of
+manipulating a new dogma. Men say now, what Cardinal
+Bessarion said before, according to an anecdote
+current here, that the way Saints were canonized in his
+own time made him very suspicious about the older Saints
+and Canonizations. In the same way the Protestant
+and Catholic laity, who are here in such numbers at
+present, say, <q>We know and see now how matters are
+managed in the Church when a new dogma is to be
+made; what artifices, and deceptions, and methods of
+intimidation are employed to gain votes. Must it not
+have been the same at former Councils?</q> I have heard
+even Bishops here say that such thoughts pressed upon
+them, and were severe temptations against faith. And
+if these things are done in the green tree, what shall be
+done in the dry? Is it different with you in Germany?
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='252'/><anchor id='Pg252'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twentieth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 9, 1870.</hi>&mdash;In commencing the discussion
+on the Catechism the Council passed into the last stage
+of the peaceful proceedings, which are to precede the
+battle on the claims of the Roman authority. The
+speech of Cardinal Rauscher, who is ill, was delivered
+by the Bishop of Gurk, and made a great impression.
+He was followed by Cardinal Mathieu, one of the best
+Latinists in the French episcopate, the Primate of
+Hungary and the Archbishop of Tours. After them
+Dupanloup spoke, who was again, as on the former
+occasion, not well heard. He lashed those who think
+that the cultivated nations of the Catholic world are to
+have a Catechism dictated to them by Rome. The
+Session was not favourable to the propositions, but men
+can no longer fix their minds on themes of lesser importance.
+All are thinking of the decisive contest
+which is imminent. Many indeed on both sides wish
+<pb n='253'/><anchor id='Pg253'/>
+that it could be avoided. The threatening attitude of the
+policy of France has roused serious misgivings. It was
+known in Rome at the end of January, but the decisive
+instructions only arrived on Saturday, February 5, and
+produced a deep and unpleasant sensation. Hitherto
+the Court of Rome was able to hinder the withdrawal of
+the French troops, by threatening to take refuge under
+English protection at Malta; but with the good understanding
+that now prevails between the French and
+English Governments this is no longer possible. It is
+perfectly well known in the Vatican that neither of the
+two powers will stretch out a hand to uphold Papal absolutism.
+It is a proof of the strong impression produced
+by the French note that the Papal Court has kept it
+secret. No appeal is tried to Catholic public opinion
+or the loyal episcopate, for it is well ascertained that
+the Infallibilist doctrine has very different enemies
+from the temporal power. To Cardinal Antonelli it
+seems like a denial of the whole work of his life to
+stake the temporal power of the Pope for the sake
+of a new dogma. But if this is to be saved, the dogma
+must be sacrificed. So the Opposition now has the
+assurance that the neutrality and non-intervention of
+the Catholic powers is come to an end, and it is encouraged
+<pb n='254'/><anchor id='Pg254'/>
+at the same time by the part the learned world
+has begun to take on its side, since the publication in
+Germany of the addresses which attest the antagonism
+of eminent Catholic scholars and professors of theology
+to the new dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nevertheless the minority is composed of heterogeneous
+elements, and it may be safely calculated that
+they will not all hold out to the last. Some opponents
+of the definition are friends of the doctrine, and oppose
+it on grounds not of a purely abstract or theological
+nature. No one has calculated the numerical proportion
+of these in inopportunists to the real opponents of
+Infallibility. Any serious discussion of the question
+has long been avoided, and many think it ought to be
+avoided, because therein lies the dangerous weakness of
+the party. The ground of inopportuneness, which had
+already been adopted in the Letter to the Pope from
+Fulda, was taken up from the first, in the hope of
+paralysing the majority by an imposing number of dissentients.
+They hoped to be strong by their numbers,
+and to look strong by a certain kind of unity. The
+theory of inopportuneness seemed to provide a common
+ground for the decided opponents of the dogma and for
+the timid and vacillating or moderate adherents of the
+<pb n='255'/><anchor id='Pg255'/>
+doctrine itself. That a really united Opposition has
+been formed on this basis is mainly due to the Bishop
+of Orleans. He attacked the opportuneness with such
+a powerful array of testimonies in his famous Pastoral,
+that every one saw clearly the doctrine itself was involved,
+though he never entered in so many words on
+the theological question. The position he provided has
+served its purpose for two months, without the party
+being brought to a declaration for or against the dogma.
+It has served to bring in adherents to the Opposition,
+who in the strictest sense of the word belong to the
+Roman Court party, and to provide waverers with a
+comparatively innocent method of resistance. It has
+prevented the victory of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> in the days of their
+greatest ascendancy, but it is untenable for a permanence.
+The position of the inopportunists has the fatal
+disadvantage that it can be out-flanked. That would
+have happened, had the Bishops been separately requested
+to give their opinions <q>sub secreto,</q> with a
+promise that no public declaration in the Council
+should be desired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, again, it is a position that can easily be
+mastered by means of the majority. A minority may
+be invincible on the ground of dogma, but not of
+<pb n='256'/><anchor id='Pg256'/>
+expediency. Everything can be ventured to combat a
+false doctrine, but not to hinder an imprudence or
+a premature definition. In questions of faith one dare
+not give in; not so in questions of discretion only.
+And then the Council must have been sooner or later
+driven from the ground of inopportuneness, if it was not
+shipwrecked on the order of business; for it was a point
+of view the decision could not finally hinge upon, in
+presence of a preponderating majority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The defection of part of the Opposition was thus only
+a question of time, though it became more difficult for
+individuals after each act done in union, and many an
+inopportunist has advanced to theological contradiction
+of the dogma. But the attempt to make the rejection
+of the doctrine the principle of the party forced the
+contrast more and more on the minds of individuals.
+Among the Germans primarily, and in the groups of
+leading Bishops from different countries who took
+counsel together, a more determined spirit gradually
+developed itself, and it was seen that their adversaries
+made capital out of every sign of unclearness of view
+among the Opposition. They were constantly spreading
+reports that on the main point all were united, and
+that at most there were not above twenty opponents
+<pb n='257'/><anchor id='Pg257'/>
+of the dogma, including only two Germans, who were
+adherents of Hermes and Günther; perhaps only five
+opponents in all, or none at all. In presence of these assertions
+a public declaration seemed necessary, less for
+the faithful at home than for non-Catholics, who ask
+about the doctrine. The Bishops of the Opposition told
+themselves that honour and episcopal duty demanded
+that a Bishop should not withhold his belief on a
+fundamental question, at a moment when all have to
+speak, the moment of danger. The very success of the
+inopportunist policy is no true success. It is no
+victory of the truth, when it is not openly proclaimed
+in the contest. Those who do not fight under the
+banner of their own convictions are not on equal terms
+with their adversaries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus the view has been more and more making way,
+that not only must every definition be avoided as dangerous,
+but that the doctrine of the Roman theologians
+and their adherents in the Episcopate must be rejected
+as false. And this brought men more and more to the
+scientific ground. It was no longer a mere affair of
+personal conviction, but of direct evidence, and the
+moment was come for literary argument to assert its
+place in the proceedings of the Council. The position
+<pb n='258'/><anchor id='Pg258'/>
+of the mere inopportunists became more difficult, and
+the band which held the party together was loosened.
+Their adversaries at once zealously availed themselves of
+this favourable crisis; nearly every Bishop of the minority
+was plied with various intermediate formulas and
+conciliar proposals. Attempts were made to sow disunion
+among the leaders; political jealousies at home,
+and whatever else could be made use of, were seized
+upon to undermine mutual confidence. Some were to
+be deceived by the phantom of a middle party, and were
+told that they might take a position as peacemakers at
+the head of a mediating section&mdash;of course in the anticipation
+that every one who makes concessions and admits
+the principle of the definition will pass over to the
+majority. Against all these attempts the Bishops of
+the minority have, on the whole, though not without
+some wavering, kept firm and true. But still the
+transition to the strictly theological standpoint, where
+individual conviction on the question of Infallibility
+must be decisively recognised and represented, cannot
+be accomplished without an internal conflict and
+shaking of the party.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='259'/><anchor id='Pg259'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twenty-First Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 11, 1870.</hi>&mdash;When once literature began
+to be brought to bear actively on the proceedings of the
+Council, the crisis could not long be delayed, for science,
+which has to do with truth only, knows nothing of
+diplomatic considerations, and makes no concessions to
+the requirements of the moment. It brings back the
+discussion inevitably from theory to fact, from the
+sphere of dogma to the sphere of history. In remorselessly
+exposing the inventions and forgeries
+which form the basis of the doctrine of Papal Infallibility,
+it necessarily attacks the whole ultramontane
+system of which that doctrine is the logical consequence.
+The fundamental refutation of the dogma is
+fatal to much in the specifically Roman theology and
+the modern claims of the Popes, which would not
+otherwise have been assailed in Council by any Bishop.
+Those who shrink from collision with the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and
+<pb n='260'/><anchor id='Pg260'/>
+would desire to spare it a public exposure of error
+before the whole world, and who have therefore hitherto
+remained on the defensive, will now be driven
+further and placed in a position they would never have
+chosen. They see their adversaries in a light&mdash;whether
+as deceived or deceivers&mdash;which seriously disturbs their
+daily intercourse with them. For it is no longer possible
+to conceal by any periphrasis the fact that the spirit
+the Opposition has to combat is no other than the spirit
+of lying. And so, when the voice of honest science
+cannot be excluded, no peaceful issue is possible. The
+contest takes the form of an internecine strife against
+that absolute Papal system for which the Court had at
+first confidently expected to gain the almost enthusiastic
+sanction of the Council. The aid of science can be
+purchased at no cheaper price. No wonder then if the
+Bishops recoil in trembling before the weighty task of
+winning the victory for that view which specially prevails
+among learned Germans of this day, first in the
+Council, and then among the mass of the clergy and
+the faithful. There are few among them who are not
+inwardly conscious that they will themselves come in
+for some of the heavy blows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Father Gratry's first Letter on its arrival at Rome
+<pb n='261'/><anchor id='Pg261'/>
+roused serious reflection in many. His skilful handling
+of a subject familiar to all, and his repeated application
+of the solemn passage, <q>Numquid indiget Deus
+mendacio vestro?</q><note place='foot'>Job xiii. 7.</note> together with his unmistakeable
+allusion in his division of mankind into <q>viri veraces</q>
+and <q>viri mendaces,</q> contributed to make clear the full
+significance of the contrast&mdash;to many for the first time.
+Döllinger's printed criticism of the Address was not calculated
+to quiet the excitement it caused. The Roman
+party, in the hope of effecting an internal split in the
+party, seized the handle which Döllinger's statement
+that he was in harmony on the main question with the
+majority of the German Bishops seemed to supply, and
+tried to extract a counter declaration from the Bishops.
+The first attempt, to induce the Archbishop of Munich
+to exert his authority, failed. Then the Bishop of Mayence
+brought the matter before the Assembly of German
+Opposition Bishops. He angrily disclaimed for
+himself any solidarity with Döllinger's view, and averred
+his belief in Papal Infallibility, saying it was only the
+difficulty and danger of a dogmatic declaration quite
+unnecessary in itself that made him an opponent of the
+definition. Had his motion been accepted, and the
+<pb n='262'/><anchor id='Pg262'/>
+German Opposition renounced their hostility to the
+dogma and retired to the ground of mere expediency,
+the complete victory of the Infallibilists would have
+been a matter of a few weeks only. But when the
+German Bishops rejected Ketteler's urgent demand, and
+decisively refused to give up their assault on the dogma,
+the half-and-half character and weakness of their position
+vanished, and they ceased to subordinate or
+sacrifice the theological standpoint to the question of
+expediency. And thus the difficult word has been
+spoken; they have already pronounced against the
+doctrine itself in the Addresses they have signed. The
+reproach incurred thereby does not, of course, apply in
+full force to the Bishop of Mayence, who has always
+told his colleagues that he is on their side on the question
+of opportuneness only. The Bishop of Rottenburg
+(Hefele) has already declared in his speech at Fulda
+that it is necessary to advance further and assail the
+doctrine itself. And he repeated this in reply to Ketteler's
+proposal. The great majority of the Bishops were
+unfavourable to that proposal. While in this way
+they testified their agreement with Döllinger, some of
+them&mdash;especially Strossmayer&mdash;declared emphatically
+for the œcumenicity of the Council of Florence. They
+<pb n='263'/><anchor id='Pg263'/>
+have weighty reasons for this. The more strongly the
+minority hold to Döllinger's interpretation of the
+famous Florentine decree, the less can they afford to
+depreciate the authority of the Synod. For in their
+opinion it is just that decree which serves to expose
+the dishonesty of the other party, and to overthrow the
+extreme doctrine. It will do them good service too in
+the discussion on the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi> and the new
+<hi rend='italic'>Schema de Romano Pontifice</hi>, which is now announced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But while the German Bishops rejected Ketteler's
+proposal, and left to the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà Cattolica</hi> and the Mayence
+<hi rend='italic'>Katholik</hi> the war against the Munich School, they
+did not venture to come to an open breach with the
+less homogeneous elements of their party, wishing to
+retain Ketteler on their side&mdash;who is as zealous
+against the Roman principles in Church and State as
+against German science&mdash;as an active ally in the contest
+against the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>. For this end there have been
+consultations, especially between the Archbishop of Cologne
+on one side and the Archbishop of Munich on
+the other. The commotion produced by Döllinger's
+essay in the learned world of Germany gives them
+an opportunity for helping the minority over this discomfiture,
+and averting for the immediate moment of
+<pb n='264'/><anchor id='Pg264'/>
+danger the threatened disruption. It cannot be denied
+that to a certain extent the latest declarations of German
+Catholics are very acceptable to the Bishops, for
+the very reason that they partly emanate from men who
+belong to the more moderate opponents of Infallibility.
+It is a piece of good luck for the Bishops staying at
+Rome that men who are independent, and at a distance
+from the flatteries and threats of the Vatican, undertake
+to call things by their right names, that reason
+makes itself heard by the side of passion, and science by
+the side of authority. It is moreover very convenient
+that the materials can be used while the writer is disowned.
+But although the Bishops know well how to
+value the importance of the support given to their
+cause from Germany, yet this new movement is not
+altogether to their taste; their dignity demands that
+they should not succumb to pressure from without, or
+owe too much to the public press. A Bishop is indeed
+presumed to be a theologian. And as it is impossible
+that the considerations which for the moment are
+decisive in the Council should always be taken into
+account by writers, there cannot fail to be manifold
+embarrassments. From the intra-conciliar point of
+view it is easy to go too far. And then it may be
+<pb n='265'/><anchor id='Pg265'/>
+regarded as almost inevitable that many Bishops should
+receive these manifestations of opinion from Germany
+with outward coldness, or reply by advising that it
+should be left in their hands alone to secure the victory
+of truth. In their eyes silence is in itself a kind of
+vote of confidence. A too zealous participation might
+almost look like a sign of doubt as to the Bishops
+having strength and perseverance and coherence enough
+to conquer. To be sure, none feel such doubts more
+strongly than the Bishops themselves, but nothing can
+better serve to give them the confidence in themselves
+which is so much to be desired as showing them that
+others feel it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus among the German Bishops in Rome
+Hefele's view has triumphed over Ketteler's, the
+logical and decided over the half-and-half policy, and
+the difficult turning-point has been passed without
+loss or breach in the party. And not a day too soon!
+Next week a new <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> and a new order of business
+will bring the disunion and irritation in the Council to
+a point.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='266'/><anchor id='Pg266'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twenty-Second Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 15, 1870.</hi>&mdash;If I wrote a fortnight ago
+that the situation was essentially improved since the
+first weeks, this must be taken with important reservations.
+The most keen-sighted of the North American
+Bishops then said, <q>We have done nothing at
+all, and that is a great deal.</q> He thought it an
+important gain that of the proposals laid before the
+Council, the two <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign>, nothing had passed, and
+none of the objects for which it had been convoked
+had, up to that point, been attained. But this has
+only been the damming up of a stream which eventually
+bursts through the more violently, and carries away
+the dam with it. For the majority of 500, who are
+resolved to indorse everything and vote every measure
+proposed, holds firmly together, before and behind;
+while the minority, on the other hand, is in danger of
+being shivered to pieces on the rock of opportuneness.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='267'/><anchor id='Pg267'/>
+
+<p>
+The <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> now under discussion, of a common
+Catechism for the whole Catholic world, is clearly
+connected with the general programme cut out for
+the Council; for if the new dogmas are fabricated,
+they will at once be inserted into this universal
+Catechism, and thereby inculcated in the simplest and
+most convenient manner on the youth and the whole
+body of the faithful. The Jesuits have found the
+experiment very successful in Germany with their own
+Catechism, and have thereby naturalized the doctrine
+of Infallibility gradually, with a precision rendered
+more explicit in each successive edition in the boys'
+and girls' schools, especially those conducted by nuns.
+The Catechism has also proved a great financial success,
+and thus whole countries have become tributary to
+the Order. In the same way the new Catechism of the
+Council will be a source of manifold profit to both the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and the Jesuits. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> treats the Council
+with scientific skill, like a patient who has first to be
+gently physicked, and then has stronger doses given
+him by degrees. First came the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> of philosophical
+and theological doctrine, then of discipline, and
+now the question of a common Catechism. Behind
+this looms the deeply-cutting <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on the Church;
+<pb n='268'/><anchor id='Pg268'/>
+and when that is triumphantly passed, the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on
+the Pope appears as the crown of the grand legislative
+work. While the former tractate propounds the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>supremum magisterium</foreign> of the Church, as holding sovereign
+power over lands and seas, souls and bodies, in the
+last <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> this supreme <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>magisterium</foreign> crops out in the
+person of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>, who now enters into the possession
+of the supreme dominion and powers marked out for
+him in the dogmatic chart, if we can speak of any
+marking out when, in principle, everything is laid
+claim to, and the master himself alone and conclusively
+draws the line of demarcation where he chooses. He
+presents himself to the world as infallible teacher and
+legislator in the realm of science, as supreme judge of
+the literature of the world, as supreme lord and master
+in all that pertains to religion, or is related to it, and
+as infallible judge of right and wrong in all points.
+Many will say with Polonius, <q>Though this is madness
+there is method in it.</q> Let us examine these principles
+more closely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<emph>First</emph>, The Pope possesses the supreme and immediate
+dominion and jurisdiction, not merely over the Church
+in general, but over every individual Christian. Every
+baptized person is directly and immediately subject to
+<pb n='269'/><anchor id='Pg269'/>
+the Pope, his ordinances, special commands and penalties.
+His power is <q>suprema tum in Ecclesiam universalem,
+tum in omnes et <emph>singulos</emph> Ecclesiarum pastores et <emph>fideles</emph>
+jurisdictio;</q> or, as the twenty-one Canons say, <q>ordinaria
+et immediata potestas.</q> Whoever disbelieves
+this incurs anathema.<note place='foot'>The idea is thrice repeated; <q>fideles tam seorsim singuli quam simul
+omnes officio ... veræ obedientiæ obstringuntur,</q> is said once again in the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<emph>Secondly</emph>, The Church stands as high above the State
+as heavenly beatitude above the profits and goods of
+this earthly life.&mdash;(<hi rend='italic'>Can.</hi> 13.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<emph>Thirdly</emph>, Every one must therefore prefer the advantage
+of the Church to the welfare of the State, <q>Si quando
+videantur utilia regno temporali, quæ bonis sublimioribus
+Ecclesiæ et æternæ salutis repugnent, ea nunquam
+habebunt pro veris bonis, etc.</q>&mdash;(<hi rend='italic'>Can.</hi> 13 ad fin.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<emph>Fourthly</emph>, The supreme <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>magisterium</foreign> of the Church,
+<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi> the Pope, whether alone or in union with a
+Council, has to decide what Princes and Governments
+should do or leave undone in questions of civil society
+and public affairs. <q>De ipsâ agendi normâ judicium,
+quatenus de morum honestate, <emph>de licito vel illicito</emph>
+statuendum est pro civili societate publicisque negotiis,
+ad supremum Ecclesiæ magisterium pertinet.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='270'/><anchor id='Pg270'/>
+
+<p>
+<emph>Fifthly</emph>, As the Pope possesses not only the supreme
+office of teacher, but also the supreme right of coercion
+and punishment, he not only distinguishes as teacher
+what is and what is not permissible for States and
+nations, but he can enforce his decision on political
+matters by penalties upon every one&mdash;be he monarch
+or minister or private citizen. He has the right
+<q>devios contumacesque exteriori judicio et salubribus
+pœnis coërcendi atque cogendi.</q>&mdash;(<hi rend='italic'>Can.</hi> 12.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<emph>Sixthly</emph>, Whenever a law of the Church conflicts with
+a law of the State, the latter must give way; and
+whoever maintains that anything forbidden by the
+law of the Church is allowed by the law of the State
+incurs anathema.&mdash;(<hi rend='italic'>Can.</hi> 20.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These ecclesiastical maxims, which deprive the laws
+of the land of all force and of all obligation for the
+conscience, are partly those already in existence, partly
+those any Pope may issue hereafter whenever it pleases
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus marriage, primary instruction and education,
+the toleration or suppression of dissenting communions,
+the jurisdiction and privileges of the clergy, the acquisition
+and control of ecclesiastical property, oaths, wills,
+and the whole of the unlimited domain taken into her
+<pb n='271'/><anchor id='Pg271'/>
+hands and legislated for by the mediæval Church, and
+in short whatever comes under the head of permissible or
+forbidden&mdash;this, <foreign rend='italic'>en masse</foreign>, forms the sphere of the Pope's
+jurisdiction, wherein he rules with absolute and sovereign
+power, and puts down all opposition by coercion
+and punishments. Truly this reminds one of the
+Prophet's words, <q>The bricks are fallen down, but
+we will build with hewn stones; the sycamores are
+fallen, and we will plant cedars in their place.</q> Since
+Paul <hi rend='italic'>iv.</hi>'s time, 260 years ago, no Pope has so openly
+and undisguisedly spoken out the thoughts and wishes
+of his heart. The kernel of the doctrine, then, is this:
+there is on earth one sole lord and master over kings
+and subjects alike, over nations as over families and
+individuals, against whom no right or privilege avails,
+and whose slaves all are. The only difference is that
+some, viz., the Bishops, can on their side rule and lord
+it in their dioceses as upper servants in the name of the
+Church or the Pope, so far as their master does not
+interfere to stop them, while all others are mere slaves
+and nothing more. This obviously goes far beyond
+the Syllabus. This is the Bull <hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi>
+modernized and, so to speak, translated out of military
+language (about the two swords) into political and juristic
+<pb n='272'/><anchor id='Pg272'/>
+terms. Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>, Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>, and Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>,
+said that, <q>ratione peccati,</q> they could interfere anywhere,
+and bring any affair or process before their
+Court, for it belongs to the Pope to decide what is sin
+and to punish it. What is said here comes to the
+same thing, that the Pope determines what is or is not
+allowable, and acts accordingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a stately edifice of universal Papal dominion
+whereon the keystone of Infallibility, which bears and
+upholds the whole, is to be placed, so that every command
+and ordinance of the Pope, even in political
+matters, is infallible, as the Jesuit Schrader has so
+clearly and forcibly pointed out. And to this must be
+added further (according to Canon 9) a vast and infinite
+domain for infallible decisions, viz., <q>all that is requisite
+for preserving the revealed deposit in its integrity.</q>
+Who can specify what is included here, or fix any limits
+to it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two other links in this world-embracing chain are
+not visible, which are yet necessary for its coherence.
+The Interdict, which robbed whole populations of divine
+service and sacraments, must be restored in its ancient
+splendour, and the Pope's right to dispense from oaths
+must be distinctly asserted.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='273'/><anchor id='Pg273'/>
+
+<p>
+The Fathers of the Council have daily opportunities
+of feeling how useful the temporal power is for the
+plenary jurisdiction of the Papacy. Were they assembled
+anywhere else than in Rome, there would be
+the possibility of holding a real Synod in the sense and
+manner of the Ancient Church, while the so-called
+Synod in Rome is in fact the mere painted corpse of a
+Council laid out on a bed of state.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soul and freedom are wanting. On any other soil
+than that of the States of the Church, the Bishops could
+assemble in a room where they could debate and understand
+one another, while they are now forcibly detained
+in the Council Hall. They could come to a mutual understanding
+by means of the press, by printed proposals or
+statements of opinion, weekly reports and the like.
+Anywhere else such treatment as the Patriarch of
+Babylon experienced would have been impossible; he
+has now taken refuge under the protection of the
+French Embassy. But here the King of Rome lends to
+the Pontiff the means of enforcing unreserved submission,
+and it is like the lion's den, <q>vestigia nulla retrorsum.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many a French Bishop has shared the experiences
+of the famous Lamennais thirty-eight years ago, who
+<pb n='274'/><anchor id='Pg274'/>
+came to the Eternal City full of ardent devotion to the
+Chair of Peter and firm faith in its infallibility, and on
+his departure, after a long stay there, wrote to a friend,
+<q>Restait Rome; j'y suis allé et j'ai vu là la plus infame
+cloaque qui ait jamais souillé les regards humains.</q> I
+will not transcribe what follows, though it was lately
+read to me by a Bishop. It may be seen in his Letters.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Correspondance</hi>, Paris, i. 247.</note>
+But this I can testify: there are men in the French
+Episcopate who used to be zealous champions of the
+temporal power, but who would now bear its loss with
+great equanimity, if only the calamity of the decrees
+chartered for the Council could be thereby warded
+off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yesterday, February 14, the ice was broken at last.
+The Bishop of Belley for the first time mentioned the
+Infallibility doctrine in the General Congregation, observing
+that the Council should at once proclaim it
+and go home, as that was the only object they had
+been summoned to Rome for.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile an instructive calculation has been made
+of the proportion in which the different nations and
+Catholic populations are represented in the Council.
+It appears from them that the Catholics of North Germany
+<pb n='275'/><anchor id='Pg275'/>
+have <emph>one</emph> vote in Council for every 810,000 souls,
+and those of the States of the Church for every 1200, so
+that one Roman outweighs 60 Germans. It has been
+further ascertained that the 512 Infallibilists in the
+Council represent a population of 73,011,000 souls,
+while only 94 opponents of the dogma represent
+46,278,000. With the Infallibilists one vote represents
+142,570, with the Opposition, 492,320 souls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Austria has now announced by her ambassador, Count
+Trautmansdorff, that the Government will not allow
+decrees in contradiction with the Constitution to be
+promulgated in the country. This threat will produce
+little effect, for all the doctrinal decrees have full force
+throughout the whole Church from the mere fact of
+being promulgated at the Council; only the disciplinary
+regulations require to be promulgated in the various
+countries and dioceses. Thus the Council of Trent has
+never been promulgated in France, notwithstanding all
+the endeavours of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, but the dogmatic decrees
+have always been in full force there as elsewhere.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='276'/><anchor id='Pg276'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twenty-Third Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 16, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The order of business is now
+to be altered, which means that an end is to be put to
+the speeches. The Bishops are to hand in their views,
+scruples and suggestions in writing to the Commission for
+revising motions, which will use its own discretion as to
+noticing or leaving unnoticed the proposals made with
+a view to their being submitted to the Council. There
+will then, in place of a discussion, be a mere voting,
+which individuals may give their reasons for, if they
+have previously stated the particular point they wish
+to speak on and obtained leave for it. And in the new
+order of business, the Pope's right to make and promulgate
+decrees on faith with a mere majority is said to be
+emphatically laid down. When this and the anticipated
+and dreaded <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> <q>On the Pope</q> are promulgated,
+we shall see what attitude the Bishops will
+assume towards them. Both are now suspended like
+<pb n='277'/><anchor id='Pg277'/>
+two swords over the heads of the Fathers. All at last
+depends on whether the Opposition remains compact,
+or crumbles to pieces under the efforts of the curialists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If the general war required by the principles of the
+new <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> against modern systems and governments,
+which conflict in numberless cases with the laws of the
+Church, is to be undertaken, the question arises, Where
+is the army to carry it on, and what weapons are to be employed?
+No doubt the trumpeters of the army are ready
+at hand, viz., the Jesuits of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> and the monastery
+of Laach, but it seems a doubtful look-out about
+soldiers. The Jesuits, indeed, command at present a
+considerable number of distinguished and wealthy
+females, but that will not go far in the great contest
+against laws, parliaments and governments. The Pope
+himself must principally supply the arms, which can
+only be the old ones of excommunication, interdict and
+processes of the Inquisition. Excommunication was
+formerly very effective, when the excommunicated
+could be proceeded against as heretics after a twelve-month,
+but that is no longer feasible. Interdict, too, is
+become a blunted instrument, which no Pope has ventured
+to make use of since Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> succumbed in his
+battle with Venice. The Inquisition only survives now
+<pb n='278'/><anchor id='Pg278'/>
+for the 700,000 souls of the present States of the Church.
+That drastic means of giving up refractory populations
+<foreign rend='italic'>en masse</foreign> to slavery and spoliation, as applied by Clement
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, Nicolas <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, Julius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi>, and Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>, cannot
+easily be adopted now. So they will be content for the
+time with establishing the principle, and must await
+more favourable circumstances for realizing it. But
+the Bishops are between two fires: they are discredited
+with Rome, because they must continue to acknowledge
+the civil laws, which are in fact condemned; they are
+exposed with their Governments and people to the constant
+suspicion of being on the watch for some political
+complication to secure the triumph, at least in particular
+cases, of the ecclesiastical principles recognised as valid
+at Rome&mdash;in other words, the Decretals&mdash;over the laws
+of the State.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed to me important to ascertain more precisely
+the attitude of the Dominicans&mdash;who are still a
+powerful corporation, through their possessing such influential
+offices as the Inquisition, Index, Mastership of
+the Sacred Palace, etc.&mdash;towards Infallibilism. They
+have always been the standing rivals and opponents of
+the Jesuits, and before 1773 were often able to resist
+them successfully. Now, of course, everywhere out of
+<pb n='279'/><anchor id='Pg279'/>
+Rome, they are out-flanked and repressed by the Jesuits,
+while in Rome they have no influence with the Pope.
+Yet they too are all decided Infallibilists, and that
+because of their great theologian, Thomas Aquinas.
+That he himself became implicated in this notion only
+through means of the forgeries in Gratian, and of another
+great fabrication, with spurious passages of the
+Fathers, specially devised for his own benefit, they
+neither know, nor are willing to believe when told of it.
+They say they have once sworn to the doctrine of St.
+Thomas, and must therefore adhere to the Infallibilist
+doctrine introduced by him into the schools, to avoid
+perjury.<note place='foot'>[A writer in the Cologne <hi rend='italic'>Rheinischer Merkur</hi> of May 14, a newly
+started organ of Liberal Catholic principles, conducted entirely by priests,
+learnedly discusses the question <q>whether St. Thomas Aquinas taught
+Papal Infallibility,</q> and comes to the conclusion that, in spite of the
+influence of these forged authorities on his mind, he did not.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A certain feeling of discouragement betrays itself
+among many Infallibilists, and there is much in the
+occurrences of the last few weeks to account for it.
+Thus the Archbishop of Milan, whose diocese nearly
+equals in extent the whole States of the Church, has
+received an address from his clergy and people expressing
+agreement with his work against the dogma, which
+has greatly rejoiced him. And the news of the state of
+<pb n='280'/><anchor id='Pg280'/>
+feeling in Germany is disheartening. Golden results
+had been reckoned on from the efforts of the Jesuits
+and their pupils there for the last twenty years. It
+was supposed here that a very considerable number of
+people beyond the Alps must be inspired with zeal for
+Papal Infallibility. When the impulse given by Döllinger
+evoked so many and such weighty expressions
+of opinion on the other side, it was confidently expected
+in Rome that a strong popular demonstration in favour
+of the dogma would burst out, like a mighty hurricane,
+from every district in Germany, as the 800 Jesuits at
+work there would easily be able to bring that to pass.
+But now it is evident that no single man of influence
+in the whole country will make himself responsible by
+name for this opinion, and that all who are eminent
+for authority and knowledge&mdash;especially historians and
+theologians&mdash;protest against the proposed new dogma.
+Even the Jesuit Catechism has not been able to effect
+everything in this respect. Can a new dogma be fabricated
+for Spaniards, Italians and South Americans
+exclusively? And even in North Italy an opposition
+is being manifested. It is a questionable policy to
+show to the German people so openly the gulf between
+their religious thoughts and desires and those of the
+<pb n='281'/><anchor id='Pg281'/>
+Latin nations, and even to widen that gulf. And in
+what position would the episcopal signataries of the
+Fulda Pastoral find themselves, after giving such an
+explicit assurance to Catholic Germany, <q>that the
+Council would establish no new or different dogmas
+from those already written by faith on the hearts and
+consciences of all German Catholics</q>? The faith and
+conscience of the German Catholics, both theologians
+and laity, have now spoken loudly and unequivocally
+enough. And it is utterly impossible for a German
+Bishop to return home from the Council with the new
+dogma ready-made in his hand, and say to his flock, like
+St. Paul, <q>Ye foolish Germans, who hath bewitched you?</q>
+<q>You don't know yourselves what you have hitherto
+held in your faith and conscience. See, here is the
+true bread for your souls, just brought fresh from the
+bake-house of the Council. This is what you ought long
+ago to have believed; be converted, and confess that to
+be white which you have thought was black, and that
+to be a divine truth which you have taken for an invention
+of man.</q> It cannot be presumed that a Bishop
+would willingly contemplate exposing himself to the
+ridicule of all Germany.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rumour of a speedy prorogation of the Council
+<pb n='282'/><anchor id='Pg282'/>
+is constantly growing more definite. As this depends
+on one capricious will, it is quite possible in itself.
+But some striking result would have first to be attained,
+some conspicuous act accomplished by the Council;
+or else the fraud would be too glaring, the nakedness
+of the land too strikingly exhibited to the whole world.
+To the question, why ten precious weeks had been idly
+wasted without a single decree being achieved, the
+only answer would be, that the desire to deprive the
+Council of all independent action had led to the machine
+being cramped and fettered till it was brought to a standstill
+altogether. In accordance with the advice of the
+Jesuits the whole Council had in fact been pre-arranged,
+and nothing was to be left to the Fathers on their
+arrival at Rome but to affirm the thoughts and formulate
+the decrees suggested by others. The <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> prepared
+shall be read one after the other, and the Fathers
+shall say <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>, and to prevent their having any temptation
+to criticise and mangle and curiously dissect and
+combat the motions laid before them, the Sessions shall
+be held in a Hall where the speeches cannot be heard,
+and all discussion is impossible. That was the programme;
+the result has proved that the Court had
+judged rightly of about 500 out of the 700 members,
+<pb n='283'/><anchor id='Pg283'/>
+but had deceived itself as to the remaining 200.
+Veuillot, who communicates the correct views about
+the Council daily to the French, has declared that it
+was right to deprive the Bishops of the freedom of evil
+(<foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>qu'il ne fallait pas laisser aux Évêques la liberté du
+mal</foreign>). This beneficent care for the health of the Bishops'
+souls has however been extended a little too far. Many
+of them are so ungrateful as to think they are treated too
+much like automatons, and that with the <q>liberté du mal</q>
+they have also been deprived of the <q>liberté du bien.</q>
+The Roman lists of names from which the Commissions
+had to be chosen are not forgotten. The right of
+proposing motions has been made illusory by the composition
+of the Commission appointed for examining
+them, and the arrangement for making the permission
+to bring them forward dependent on the pleasure of
+the Pope. And thus great uneasiness, not to say
+exasperation, prevails among the 200 Bishops. And
+on the other hand, the Pope has been for several weeks
+past in a chronic state of mingled indignation and
+astonishment at finding so many Bishops&mdash;even at
+Rome, in his own immediate neighbourhood&mdash;daring to
+think and say the contrary to what he, Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>, thinks
+and says.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='284'/><anchor id='Pg284'/>
+
+<p>
+This rebellion of thought has not indeed yet been
+directly and openly manifested in the Council Hall.
+But when the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi>, and with it Infallibility,
+really come to be discussed, then even within the
+sacred precincts of St. Peter's, and close to the Tomb of
+the Apostles&mdash;which the Pope had assured himself
+would inspire very different thoughts into the Bishops'
+heads&mdash;bold utterances of contradiction will be heard,
+and will resound throughout Europe, for <q>publicity
+discloses the Acheron of the Council.</q> The expected
+and decisive sealing up of 3000 mouths is at an end
+once for all, and even that most correct and devoted of
+Romanists, Veuillot, has declared in his <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi> that
+such a silence of the grave is impossible, especially for
+the French, and has accordingly blurted out such of
+the secrets of the Hall as seemed to him desirable
+without scruple. Nor have the authorities taken it at
+all ill of him. But to hear Bishops publicly in Council,
+and in the hearing of the Papal Legates, proclaiming
+views diametrically opposed to those of the Pope&mdash;and
+that, too, in a question so fundamental and so
+completely dominating the whole future life of the
+Church&mdash;would be a scandal which must be averted
+even at the heaviest cost. Some time before the Indiction
+<pb n='285'/><anchor id='Pg285'/>
+of the Council, in 1866, Pius himself formally
+asserted, in the most significant terms, and in presence
+of a numerous assemblage of foreigners who had come
+to offer him their homage, his true attitude towards the
+world and the Bishops, whether assembled or dispersed.
+He spoke in French, and in words carefully
+prepared beforehand, and I give the speech precisely as
+it was reported, with the reporters' names subscribed, in
+the <hi rend='italic'>Monde</hi>, the <hi rend='italic'>Union</hi>, and the <hi rend='italic'>Observateur Catholique</hi>
+of April 1, 1866, p. 357:&mdash;<q><emph>Seul</emph>, malgré mon indignité,
+<emph>je suis le successeur des apôtres</emph>, le vicaire de Jésus
+Christ; <emph>seul</emph>, j'ai <emph>la mission de conduire et de diriger la
+barque de Pierre, je suis la voie, la vérité, et la vie.</emph> Il
+faut bien qu'on le sache, afin de ne pas se laisser tromper
+et aventurer par la parole de gens qui se disent Catholiques,
+mais qui veulent et enseignent tout autre chose
+que ce que veut et enseigne l'Église.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whether he really intended thereby to deny the
+office of the Bishops as successors of the Apostles,
+which has always hitherto been recognised in theology,
+I cannot say. But this much is clear, that every
+Bishop who in any important question of faith differs
+from the views of Pius, departs from <q>the way,</q> swerves
+from <q>the truth,</q> excludes himself from <q>the life.</q>
+<pb n='286'/><anchor id='Pg286'/>
+Nothing of the sort has ever been suffered at Rome; no
+dissent has ventured into the light of day. The censorship
+and the Inquisition have taken care of that.
+It would be a supremely dangerous precedent if that
+were now to happen for the first time, and with many
+Bishops of different nations for the dissidents. The contradiction
+between the Liberal Bishops and the Pope would
+be the more glaring, as Pius has only in the last few
+days addressed a very categorical letter to the Liguorian
+Jules Jacques on his own infallibility. He praises this
+man for having collected from the writings of Liguori
+his statements about Papal Infallibility, and thus exhibited
+the <q>sound doctrine.</q> The <q>unsound</q> doctrine
+cannot be freely proclaimed in St. Peter's, and besides
+it has such a peculiar power of infection, that for centuries
+Rome has surrounded herself with a threefold
+<foreign rend='italic'>cordon</foreign> and all sorts of disinfecting remedies against
+this epidemic. And accordingly, from the Roman
+standpoint, the adjournment of the Council must obviously
+appear to be in any case the lesser evil in comparison
+with so unheard-of a scandal. Just think of a
+philippic in the Council Hall against the infallibility of
+the Pope, an exposure of the errors of Popes&mdash;there in
+St. Peter's, close to the Vatican, and before 700 Prelates!
+<pb n='287'/><anchor id='Pg287'/>
+That would indeed be, in the words of Daniel,
+the abomination of desolation in the holy place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moreover, an adjournment and subsequent reassembling
+would have this advantage, that the order of
+business and the locality could be changed. So
+long as these remain unchanged, it is impossible to
+speak seriously of a Council, and if the Roman censorship
+prevents any complaints on the subject being
+heard, the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> cannot conceal from itself that after
+the close of the Council the real state of the case will
+be universally recognised as a notorious fact, and the
+entire want of freedom or examination or discussion
+be insisted upon as a ground and justification for rejecting
+the decrees. But a Council universally questioned
+or rejected would be an endless source of
+embarrassment and distress for the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> themselves.
+They would have at last to exclaim, <q>All I have gained
+is a loss.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These and the like thoughts are now occurring to
+many. The advice of the French Government, which
+would on all accounts gladly welcome an adjournment,
+the admonitions of Austria, which has at last, at the
+twelfth hour, receded from its attitude of coldness and
+indifference, and the knowledge that the two Protestant
+<pb n='288'/><anchor id='Pg288'/>
+powers, Prussia and England, maintain the same views
+on the threatened decrees and intended ecclesiastical
+conquests, though without making any direct representations
+on the subject&mdash;all this more or less contributes
+to the gravity of the crisis. There are some drops of
+wormwood mingled with the joyous goblets quaffed
+daily to the Pope by the majority of 500 obsequious
+and courtly Latins. As the obedience of these
+Bishops and the Vicars-Apostolic, who can at any
+moment be deposed by Propaganda, is unlimited, they
+will vote the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> exactly as the Pope desires;
+but most of them do it at least with an inward repugnance,
+and say, like the Aragonese Cortes of old, <q>We
+obey, but we don't execute.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='289'/><anchor id='Pg289'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twenty-Fourth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 20, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The following classification of
+the French Bishops here according to their parties may
+be interesting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French themselves distinguish three factions,
+Liberal, Ultramontane, and the Third Party&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, those
+who have signed no address, and have openly refused
+to do so. To the Liberal section belong Alby, Gaz,
+Marseilles, Nizza, Cahors, Mende, Perpignan, Bayonne,
+Montpellier, Valence, Viviers, La Rochelle, Luçon,
+Besançon, Metz, Nancy, Verdun, Annecy, Autun, Dijon,
+Grenoble, Paris, Orleans, Rheims, Chalons, S. Brieux,
+Vannes, Bayeux, Coutances, Evreux&mdash;thirty votes altogether.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Ultramontanes are&mdash;Rodez, Aire, Nîmes, Angoulême,
+Poictiers (in the superlative), Belley, St. Diez,
+Strasburg, Le Puy, Tulle, St. Jean de Maurienne, Langres,
+St. Claude, Blois, Chartres, Meaux, Versailles,
+<pb n='290'/><anchor id='Pg290'/>
+Amiens, Beauvais, Rennes (a malcontent Ultramontane),
+Seez, Moulins, Toulouse, Carcassonne, Montauban,
+Laval and Le Mans&mdash;twenty-seven votes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the Third Party, headed by the Cardinal-Archbishop
+of Rouen, are included Périgueus, Bourges, Tarantaise,
+Cambray, Arras, Nevers, Troyes, Pamiers, Tours&mdash;ten
+votes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Bishops of Digne, Fréjus, Toulon and Soissons
+are described as doubtful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The English Bishops are similarly divided. Manning
+has only been able to get one single Bishop over to his
+side. Two, Errington and Clifford, have signed the
+Address against Infallibility. Six, including Bishop
+Ullathorne of Birmingham, form a third party, who
+decline to sign anything on either side. It is the same
+with the Irish Bishops. The Romanized Cullen, whom
+the Pope forced as Primate on the Irish Bishops, with
+the same view as he imposed Manning on the English
+Bishops, against their will, is of course an Infallibilist,
+and would rejoice to enforce this dogma, which they
+detest, on the educated classes of Ireland by the help
+of the lower orders. Bishops Moriarty and Leahy (of
+Dromore) have signed the Petition against Infallibility.
+Archbishop MacHale of Tuam, and some others with
+<pb n='291'/><anchor id='Pg291'/>
+him, belong to the third party, while the majority of
+the Irish Bishops see in Papal Infallibility a means for
+increasing their influence over the people. What view
+the South Italian Bishops take is illustrated by the following
+anecdote. An Italian statesman spoke to two
+of them about the immoderate claims contained in the
+<hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi>, and asked them whether they really
+meant to assent to such decrees? <q>We cannot go
+against the Holy Father,</q> was their reply. When he
+reminded them of the independent attitude of the
+German Bishops, they replied, <q>They can take that
+line, for they are rich.</q> Another of the South
+Italians amused the Council by urging that the constant
+wearing of the long cassock should be enforced,
+because Christ rose and ascended into heaven in that
+dress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi> has been in the hands
+of the Bishops, it is clear to all that the Council has
+been convoked simply for the purpose of extending the
+power of the Pope and strengthening the influence of
+the Jesuits, and that everything is designed to subserve
+this one end. The Bishops are to forge chains for binding,
+first the secular powers, and then themselves and
+the whole clergy with them. The feeling they are
+<pb n='292'/><anchor id='Pg292'/>
+possessed with is a bitter and painful one. They feel
+outwitted and caught in a trap. They were summoned
+to Rome, without being told a word of the objects aimed
+at or the matters to be dealt with; on their arrival
+they were strung and fixed, like the keys of a harpsichord,
+into the great conciliar instrument, and they
+find that they are to be used by the hand of the mighty
+musician to produce tones which sound to themselves
+most utterly nauseous. They know well enough that
+the most eloquent speeches and most forcible arguments
+don't change a single vote of the majority,
+who would remain firm and unmoved as the rock
+of Peter if a Chrysostom or Augustine was among
+them. In an outburst of disgust at the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de
+Ecclesiâ</hi>, a German Prelate, formerly Roman in his
+sympathies, exclaimed, <q>This <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> deserves to be
+thrust down into hell.</q> One hears these men congratulating
+their colleagues who stayed at home under
+a presentiment of what was coming. The news of
+the adjournment of the Council, begun under such
+evil auspices, would be welcomed by them with
+delight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But these reports of an adjournment are rather
+wishes than hopes. The prorogation would imply an
+<pb n='293'/><anchor id='Pg293'/>
+admission that the Council had been a failure through
+the fault of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, in the perversity of the regulations
+it imposed on the Bishops, and the extravagance of the
+measures it brought forward. <q>Perissent les colonies
+plutôt qu'un principe</q>&mdash;this saying, uttered in the Paris
+Convention of 1793, may often be heard here in various
+applications. The world will be enlightened in a few
+days by the publication of the new or altered order of
+business. It is not prorogation that is the immediate
+business, but the subjection of the minority more than
+ever to the rule of the majority and its wire-pullers
+who stand behind it, the outvoting them by majorities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In French circles a paper called the <hi rend='italic'>Moniteur Universel</hi>
+is making no small sensation. It contains a detailed
+account of the proceedings of the Council, drawn
+up by a learned Frenchman residing here and under
+the inspiration of French Bishops. It is thoroughly
+authentic and carefully weighed&mdash;far the best and most
+accurate account of the Council in that language. You
+may perhaps find room for the following, which substantially
+confirms and partly supplements and rectifies
+my own statements:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>The Council of Trent arranged the order of business
+for itself. In this case just the contrary has been
+<pb n='294'/><anchor id='Pg294'/>
+done: everything was pre-arranged and imposed on the
+Council by the Pope, and even the secretaries and scrutators
+were named beforehand. No initiative is allowed to
+the Bishops; the Commission for examining motions
+is formed of the hottest Infallibilists and members of
+the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, but the final decision is reserved to the Pope.
+The proposers of a motion are not even allowed to explain
+and defend it, so that the freedom nominally conceded
+to the Bishops of proposing measures is rendered purely
+illusory. By the composition of the four Commissions,
+elected from Roman lists of names, all work of critical
+importance is kept in the hands of the few Infallibilists
+chosen for the purpose by the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, to the exclusion
+of 700 Bishops, among whom are all the German Bishops
+who signed the Fulda Letter to the Pope, and the most
+influential French Prelates. In short, all Bishops not
+known to be thorough-going Infallibilists have been
+systematically excluded from the Commissions. Very
+different was it at Trent, where all the Fathers, divided
+into four Congregations, took a real part in the work.
+We must add the monstrous disproportion of national
+representation&mdash;the enormous and overwhelming preponderance
+of the Italians, still further strengthened
+by the host of Vicars-Apostolic, who can at any
+<pb n='295'/><anchor id='Pg295'/>
+moment be deposed by the Propaganda without any
+legal formality. Thus the Italian Bishops alone outnumber
+all the French, German, Hungarian and North
+American together, though these last represent a
+population nearly three times as large. The weakness
+of the two French Cardinals, Bonnechose and Mathieu,
+who ought to have taken the lead, has frustrated the
+attempt to unite the French Bishops in a national
+group. Bonnechose consulted Antonelli, who said
+the French must not assemble in larger bodies than
+fifteen or at most twenty together. The evil consequences
+were at once shown in the elections.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>The Bishops are compelled by the Pope to hold
+their sittings in a place where at least a third cannot
+understand a word that is said, so that, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, Cardinal
+di Pietro long since declared he had not really understood
+a single speech, and another Cardinal said that not
+twenty words of all the speeches had reached his ear.
+A really searching discussion and living interchange of
+observations and replies is out of the question. No
+speaker can hope to produce any impression on this
+audience. And thus the first <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, which consists
+of 140 pages, was the subject of general discussion for
+weeks without any detailed discussion of the separate
+<pb n='296'/><anchor id='Pg296'/>
+articles being arrived at, or any point certainly ascertained,
+notwithstanding the number of speakers. The only
+result was a great waste of time, bodily fatigue and a
+deep discouragement. Had the object been to satiate
+the assembly with speeches <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>usque ad nauseam</foreign> it could
+not have been better managed. It would be something
+if the Fathers could read the speeches they can't
+hear, but neither are they allowed to be read; the
+Bishops may not even print their addresses at their
+own cost. Thus many of them are wholly deprived of
+the opportunity of expressing their views, knowing that
+they will not be heard.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Vigorous preparations were made for two years
+before the opening of the Council. There is matter
+enough for ten Councils, but it is only communicated
+to the Bishops piecemeal, so that they can get no insight
+into the connection and plan of the separate propositions.
+Thus a ready-made Council has been put
+before 700 Bishops, which they are obliged again to
+unstitch like a web. As the Bishops had no means of
+gaining previous information, the Council is mostly
+deaf and dumb, and has at last got driven into a
+narrow pass from which there is no exit without a
+thorough alteration of the order of business. No one
+<pb n='297'/><anchor id='Pg297'/>
+can say how it will be with the examination of the
+separate articles of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign>, and yet the Council
+ought to have most carefully weighed every word of
+decrees which are to be imposed on the world under
+anathema.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='298'/><anchor id='Pg298'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twenty-Fifth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 24, 1870.</hi>&mdash;Since my last letter, the
+Council, whose movements for a long time were like
+those of a tortoise, has made gigantic strides. The
+Goddess of Insolence (ὕβρις) rules here just as the
+Greek tragedians&mdash;especially Sophocles&mdash;describe her.
+All rumours of an adjournment of the Council were
+partly well-meant wishes of several Bishops, partly
+produced by the fact of the Governments&mdash;the French
+in particular&mdash;earnestly desiring it. Here in Rome
+no one of the Vatican party has thought of it for a
+moment. All who know the real state of things and
+persons here must be convinced that the Council will
+certainly be gone through with to the end, either completely&mdash;in
+full accordance with the well-calculated
+plan sketched out during the last two years for partly
+Jesuitizing and partly Romanizing everything in the
+Church, in theology and in the religious life, and carrying
+<pb n='299'/><anchor id='Pg299'/>
+out centralization to the utmost extent&mdash;or that, at
+least, there will be no adjournment till the most
+precious jewel hitherto wanting to the Papal tiara,
+dogmatic Infallibility, has been inserted there. Then,
+and not till then, will the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> have obtained the
+irresistible talisman which opens every gate, fulfils
+every desire and brings every treasure. That dogma
+is Aladdin's magic lamp for Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are three powers who wish to gain by the
+Council, and who decide on its proceedings and destiny&mdash;the
+Pope, the Jesuits, and the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. Among the
+members of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> there are indeed very few who
+have not long since made their calculations, with that
+appreciation of the realities of life which is peculiar
+to the Italian nation, and who do not know as well
+what a dogma is worth for Rome as people know what
+a man is <q>worth</q> in England. Every assailant of the
+dogma is their personal enemy; he is simply emptying
+their gold-mine. Nor is the doctrine less valuable and
+indispensable to the Jesuits, at this day more than
+before, since they no longer have to fear the rivalry
+of any other Order in making capital out of the prerogative
+of Infallibility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As regards the Pope, he has constantly changed in
+<pb n='300'/><anchor id='Pg300'/>
+his official life and vacillated from one side to the
+other, and those about him say that in many, nay in
+most, things he follows capricious and momentary
+impulses. But Pius is inflexible and immutable
+where he fancies he is a divine instrument and has received
+a divine mission, and that is the case here. He
+is persuaded that he is ordained by the special favour
+of God to be the most glorious of all Popes. Among
+his predecessors there are three to whom he seems to
+me to have a great likeness. I should say that he had
+chosen them as models, if I could assume that he knew
+their history. But Pius has never occupied himself
+with the past; he is purely the child of his age, and
+lives only in the present. The three are Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi>,
+Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>xi.</hi>, and above all Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> He has in common
+with the first his strong experimental belief in his own
+personal inspiration without any theological culture.
+He resembles the second in giving himself up to the
+theological guidance of the Jesuits, and in his highhanded
+treatment of such Bishops as dare to have an
+opinion of their own. And just as Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> used to
+boast that hereafter men would be obliged to tell of
+the lofty plans conceived by an aged Italian who, as
+being near his death, might have rested and bewailed
+<pb n='301'/><anchor id='Pg301'/>
+his sins,<note place='foot'>Navagero, <hi rend='italic'>Relazione</hi>, p. 389 in the Venetian Collection, ed. Alberi, i. 7.</note> so does Pius too desire in his old age to
+make great though peaceful conquests, and to establish
+the Papal sovereignty as a <q>rocher du bronze,</q> to
+borrow the phrase of another autocrat. With the help
+of the Council he hopes to render the universal dominion
+of the Papacy an impregnable fortress, by means of new
+walls, bastions and batteries, and to hand it down to
+his successors as an omnipresent and omnipotent power.
+He believes that the thoughts and desires of his soul
+are in reality the counsels of God made known to him
+by inspiration, and that if by following these counsels
+he accomplishes the deliverance of the Church and of
+mankind, it is the Hand of God which uses him as an
+instrument. And why should not Pius see a sign of
+his election to high and extraordinary destinies in the
+circumstance of his having already sat longer than any
+of his 256 predecessors, even Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi>, on the apostolic
+throne? A history of his Pontificate has already been
+written in this sense by one of the Jesuits of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà,</hi>
+and Pius has the chapters read to him one after the
+other. I am told that a chapter on the Council is
+already written. The French Court historiographer,
+Vertot, who had to describe a Belgian campaign including
+<pb n='302'/><anchor id='Pg302'/>
+the siege of a fortress, wrote the history of the siege
+before it was finished, and said quietly, <q>Mon siège est
+fait.</q> And thus the Jesuit historian of the Pope can
+already say, <q>Mon Concile est fait.</q> And in one sense
+the Council is indeed finished since the 23d inst.&mdash;finished
+by the new order of business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If the merit of this clever invention is primarily due
+to the Cardinals on the Commission for revising motions,
+and the Jesuits who were probably taken into partnership
+with them, its introduction must be counted
+among the most eventful acts of Pius, past or future.
+If it is carried out and adhered to without opposition,
+it is unquestionably the most conspicuous of all the
+victories of the Pope. Margotti, the editor of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Unita Cattolica</hi>, will hardly be able to find words to
+do justice to the great day, February 23, 1870, with its
+boundless wealth of happy results, in the next edition
+of his work, <hi rend='italic'>Le Vittorie della Santa Chiesa sotto Pio
+IX</hi>. A <hi rend='italic'>Te Deum</hi> will have to be sung in every Jesuit
+College of the old and new world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Great anxiety was felt beforehand about the new
+order of business. It was said that the Sessions were
+to be something more than mere votings, that there
+would still be speeches made, that the written memorials
+<pb n='303'/><anchor id='Pg303'/>
+would not be so directly thrown into the waste-paper
+basket, but would be considered and&mdash;if they approved
+of them&mdash;made use of by the Commission. But everything
+will be settled by the Commission and by a
+simple majority of votes; the minority may talk, but
+only so long as the Commission and the majority choose
+to listen to them. <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Væ victis!</foreign> The Council belongs to
+the Italians and the Spaniards, who are in close alliance
+with them: from henceforth to wish to reject any <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>
+or decree brought before it, is like wanting to stop
+water from flowing downwards. All the proposals of
+the minority for a change in the order of business have
+been left unnoticed. It had already been resolved that
+a debate could only be cut short by the votes of a
+majority of two-thirds, but this has been reversed.
+What will the French and Germans do now? This is
+naturally the question which trembles on every lip and
+is written on every countenance. Will they simply
+acquiesce in the <foreign rend='italic'>fait accompli</foreign> with a good grace, and
+obediently assume the rôle of the Greek Chorus in the
+drama of the Council&mdash;simply to reflect and moralize, but
+take no active part in the proceedings? The next few
+days will show. So much every one perceives; the order
+of business is the noose which, once fixed on the minority,
+<pb n='304'/><anchor id='Pg304'/>
+cannot be got out of, and will only be drawn tighter
+and tighter till it strangles them at last. It is clear
+that the majority has the hide of a rhinoceros, from
+which every arrow shot by the Opposition, however
+skilfully aimed, glances off harmless. Where are
+now the wise and foolish virgins? <q>Give us of your
+oil, for our lamps are gone out,</q> must the Germans,
+French, and Spanish say henceforth to the Italians,
+and the answer will be more friendly than in the
+Gospel: <q>You need not buy any more oil; come over
+to our side and be content to use our store.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is hardly necessary to observe to your readers that
+everything which takes place here turns on the question
+of Infallibility. The new order of business is
+merely the outer covering for this kernel. <q>With
+Infallibility we have all we desire or need,</q> say the
+Italians, if that is gained we may <q>let the nigger
+go,</q> and can dispense with his services for the future.
+But for German theologians, whose hair stands on
+end at the new order of business and all it involves,
+I can find no other consolation than what they may
+derive from the following Persian tale. An English
+ambassador sent to Persia&mdash;I think it was Morier&mdash;paid
+the usual visits at Teheran, and was introduced
+<pb n='305'/><anchor id='Pg305'/>
+to the younger son of the Shah. He found
+him groping about blindfold in the room, and feeling
+for the furniture in it. The Prince explained this
+strange business by telling him that it was the rule for
+the younger sons to be blinded at the death of the
+Shah, in order to make them incapable of succeeding,
+and that he wished to prepare and practise himself
+beforehand for the fate impending over him. <q>Go ye,
+and do likewise.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If the German theologians should still have courage
+to present an address to their Bishops, the subscription
+might be, <q>Morituri vos salutant.</q> Why have these
+theologians come to such utter discomfiture?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here one already hears shouts of triumph; the day
+of retribution will soon come for those proud Transalpines,
+when they must bend their necks under the
+Caudine yoke of the new dogma, or await suspension,
+degradation, etc.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If German theology had long been decried and hated
+by the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and the Italian Jesuits, and if the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>
+gladly took occasion to pour out its wrath on the
+scholars of <q>foggy</q> Germany, you may conceive the
+extent this fury has reached in Italian clerical papers
+and curialist circles, since it has become known that
+<pb n='306'/><anchor id='Pg306'/>
+the most influential theologians have pronounced against
+Infallibility, and that not one&mdash;with the exception of a
+couple of pupils of the Jesuits&mdash;has said a word to defend
+it. It is well that one of the most distinguished
+Italians, a man whose devotion to the Church is unimpeached
+even in Rome, and whom the Pope has
+commissioned to write a history of the Council&mdash;I mean
+Cantù&mdash;has some years ago confessed and censured
+this characteristic of his countrymen. <q>To call laziness
+superiority, and evade the trouble of examining questions
+by depreciating them, this is only too much the
+habit of Italians, and then they mock at the ponderous,
+long-winded, hair-splitting Germans. But we must
+endure the reproach of negligence and thoughtlessness
+from the Germans, while we blindly accept falsified
+documents.</q><note place='foot'><q>Ammantar la pigrizia di superiorità, sottrarsi alla noja d'esaminar
+le quistioni col disprezarle, sono vezzi troppo communi in Italia, e il
+beffarsi di questi pesanti Tedeschi, che vanno a cercare la fin dei fini. Ma
+in tal caso rassegniamoci a vederci trattati, da questi di negligenza e di
+spensierataggine quando accettiamo a occhi bendati carte, falsificate da
+tristi speculatori o da sbadati raccoglitori,</q> etc.&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>Archivo Storico Italiano</hi>,
+1860, xii. 19.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cantù has hit on the sore place there; for it is
+precisely their having pointed out the long line of
+numerous and systematic forgeries, on which the
+<pb n='307'/><anchor id='Pg307'/>
+Roman claims of Infallibility are based, and which are
+used to further other aims of the Italians, that is the
+main ground of the hatred of the Germans. And now
+Frenchmen too, like Gratry, come forward and publish
+these facts over land and sea in their cosmopolitan
+tongue and clear incisive style.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To return to what preceded the publication of the
+new order of business; in the last sittings of the
+Council coming events threw their shadows before.
+The Bishops of Carcassonne and Belley declared roundly
+that Infallibility must be proclaimed, and in order, said
+the latter, to restore the menaced or broken unity of
+the Church. The impatience and vexation of the
+authorities are constantly on the increase. Manning
+said there was only one way of stopping the definition,
+and that was to cut the throats of half the 500 Bishops
+of the majority. Of course the Prelates who heard
+him cried out, like the Emperor Charles V. at the Diet
+of Augsburg, when Count George of Brandenburg
+wanted to cut off heads for another doctrine, <q>No heads
+off! no heads off!</q> At the last sitting on the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de
+Catechismo</hi>, on the 22d, a scene occurred which presages
+what is to become the regular practice. The Bishop of
+Namur had said, in reference to some previous attacks
+<pb n='308'/><anchor id='Pg308'/>
+on the Breviary, that no one who spoke against it could
+be a good Christian. For the information of your readers
+I must premise a few words here. The Breviary is a
+collection of prayers and lections for the clergy, introduced
+by Rome, consisting chiefly of psalms and
+passages from the Bible and the Lives of the Saints.<note place='foot'>[It was originally intended for public use also, and is still recited
+publicly by Cathedral Chapters and religions communities. Some portions
+of it, as Vespers and Compline, are often used in parish churches also,
+especially in France.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> has used this, like so many other things, as
+an <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>instrumentum dominationis</foreign>, and a number of fables
+and forgeries devised in the interest of the Papal system
+have been interpolated into it. The French Church
+had long since adopted the precaution of employing a
+Breviary of her own, much better and purer than the
+Roman. It was against observations made about this
+in the Council that the harsh comment of the Bishop of
+Namur was directed.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='309'/><anchor id='Pg309'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twenty-Sixth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, Feb. 28, 1870.</hi>&mdash;Our last letter closed with an
+account of a scene in the Session of February 22, occasioned
+by some attacks on the Roman Breviary. The
+Bishop of Namur had maintained that no one who
+attacked it could be a good Christian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Haynald was one of those who had censured the
+present condition of the Breviary, and he now replied
+to Bishop Gravez that in criticising it he had the
+Fathers of Trent and the Popes themselves for accomplices
+(<foreign rend='italic'>complices</foreign>). A tempest broke out at these
+words. But Haynald went further and said, with
+reference to Bishop Langalerie of Belley, that the
+majority, with their proposals for new dogmas, were
+the cause of the disunion which had broken out in the
+Church, and that it would be much better for the heads
+of the Church to confine themselves to preserving the
+ancient doctrines in their purity, instead of adding new
+<pb n='310'/><anchor id='Pg310'/>
+ones. The Church had succeeded very well with the old
+doctrines. At this first open attack in Council on the
+Infallibilist project the storm grew fiercer, and Capalti
+seized the bell of the President, De Angelis, rung it
+violently and forbade the speaker to proceed. <q>Taceas
+et ab ambone descendas,</q> he exclaimed. When Haynald
+went on all the same, a wild cry broke from the majority.
+The Archbishop of Calocsa at last came down,
+and so great was the excitement that the sitting was
+closed and the next postponed to March 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile more attention and care than before has
+been devoted in Paris to what is going on at Rome.
+The Emperor and his present ministers understand the
+gravity of the situation; they know what would be
+meant by such journals as the <hi rend='italic'>Monde</hi> and the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>
+daily appealing to infallible Papal decisions, and under
+their authority calling in question every institution
+and law of France, and proving beforehand to their
+readers that there is no obligation in conscience to
+submit to them, because the Pope has directly or indirectly
+signified his disapproval. Archbishop Lavigerie
+of Algiers brought back word to Cardinal Antonelli, on
+returning to Rome from his mission, that France was in
+no condition to tolerate the definition of Infallibility,
+<pb n='311'/><anchor id='Pg311'/>
+which might lead to a schism, since not only the whole
+body of State-officers, but the writers, and even the
+Faubourg St. Germain, were opposed to the new dogma.
+Antonelli is not apt to be much influenced by such
+representations, which he views as mere idle threats;
+he is spoilt by the courtly flatteries of the ever obsequious
+M. de Banneville, whom he has managed completely
+to disarm. He has three devices of domestic diplomacy
+by which he knows how to make excellent use of
+both Banneville and Trautmansdorff. At one time he
+says, <q>It is not we&mdash;Pius, the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and I&mdash;who
+want the dogma, but the foreign Bishops, and we
+should be encroaching on the freedom of the Council
+by impeding them. And we ought not to subject ourselves
+to that reproach.</q> Then, for a variety, he adopts
+another line. <q>The Pope,</q> he says, <q>has all he wants
+already, and the dogma of Infallibility would not give
+him anything more. As it is, and with a Council
+assembled, all the decrees emanate from him and receive
+from him their validity, and he can summon or
+dissolve the Council at his pleasure, so that it only
+exists by his will and would crumble into dust without
+him. It is therefore the interest of the Bishops, not ours,
+that is in question here, and they will know well why
+<pb n='312'/><anchor id='Pg312'/>
+the dogma is so valuable to them.</q> His third formula
+is, <q>Every good Christian believes the doctrine already,
+and therefore little or nothing will be changed in the
+Church by defining it, and we have not the least desire
+to use the new decree for calling in question the existing
+compacts and Concordats. We shall gladly leave
+alone the concessions we have already granted.</q> These
+resources of the Cardinal have hitherto sufficed. But
+new powers and demands seem to be coming to the front,
+which his diplomatic counters will no longer satisfy. I
+have copies of two letters of Count Daru, of January 18
+and February 5. These official expressions of opinion
+from Paris have made the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> Jesuits bitterly
+angry, and their famous article on the <hi rend='italic'>Policastri</hi>, in its
+original form, contained a violent attack on the French
+statesmen, who were classed with the other ministers
+and diplomats in such ill repute at Rome. But this
+roused the alarm of the supreme authority, and so the
+Jesuits had to eat their own words, and to substitute
+for their attack a high commendation of Count Daru
+and the loyalty of France to the Concordat. There
+is some good in having the articles of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>
+regularly revised in the Vatican. I understand that it
+is intended at Paris to send a special ambassador to
+Rome to the Council.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='313'/><anchor id='Pg313'/>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the Bishops of the minority are consulting
+how they shall deal with the new order of business.
+It was announced to the Fathers at the Session of February
+22 that, in accordance with these new regulations,
+they must hand in all their observations on the first
+ten chapters of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi> in writing
+within ten days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Archbishop Spalding of Baltimore has not receded
+from his ludicrous notion that his Infallibilist formula
+is milder and more tolerable than that of the 400. He
+has laid it before the thirty-five French Bishops (of the
+minority), who have unanimously rejected it. Its essence
+consists, as was mentioned before, in asserting that everybody
+must receive with unconditional inward assent
+every Papal decision on every question of faith or morals
+or Church life. On all theological principles such faith
+can only be accorded in cases where all possibility of
+error is excluded, or, in other words, where a revealed
+truth is concerned; and therefore to accept this formula
+would be to set aside the limitation of Papal
+Infallibility, hitherto recognised even in Rome, to decisions
+pronounced <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign>. And thus, in the crush
+and confusion of the innumerable and often contradictory
+decisions of Popes, theology would degenerate
+<pb n='314'/><anchor id='Pg314'/>
+into a lamentable caricature of a system&mdash;<q>science</q> it
+could no longer be termed&mdash;involved in hopeless contradictions.
+If the good Spalding had the slightest
+acquaintance with Church history, he would know that
+he was bound, in virtue of his inward assent paid to
+all Papal decrees, first of all to reject his own orders as
+invalid.<note place='foot'>[Cf. <q>Janus,</q> pp. 60-62, 275-8.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now I must notice more particularly what
+Bishop Ketteler has published against me in some
+German newspapers. He says that in the telegram of
+February 13, published in the <hi rend='italic'>Allg. Zeitung</hi> of February
+15, he has found the opportunity he had long desired for
+convicting the writer of the <hi rend='italic'>Letters from Rome</hi> of building
+up <q>a whole system of lying and deceit.</q><note place='foot'>The proposal of two Rhenish Prelates for a common declaration against
+Döllinger's paper on Infallibility was rejected in the meeting of German
+Bishops. The chief opponents were Hefele, Eberhard, Raynald, Strossmayer
+and Förster, who maintained that, certain arguments apart, Döllinger
+represented in the main the views of most German Bishops on the subject.
+It was further insisted, in express repudiation of the stand-point of mere
+<q>inopportuneness,</q> that the addresses already signed by the Infallibilists
+were directed in principle against the doctrine of the Church. The two Prelates
+declared nevertheless that they would not separate themselves from
+their colleagues who had signed those documents.</note> It is
+<q>an indescribable dishonesty,</q> a <q>detestable untruth,</q>
+etc. His short letter bristles with such accusations.
+The untruths he complains of are the following:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<pb n='315'/><anchor id='Pg315'/>
+
+<p>
+(1.) The telegram called the statement made by
+Bishop Ketteler and his ally, Bishop Melchers, a <q>proposal.</q>
+He replies that it was only a <q>communication.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(2.) It treats the occurrence as a <q>negotiation,</q>
+whereas it was only a <q>short conference.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(3.) There was no debate with <q>a serious opposition.</q>
+The Bishops indeed had expressed different views, and
+some had disapproved Döllinger's pronouncement, while
+the others thought only certain individual Bishops
+might have occasion to come forward against it. (They
+accordingly understood Ketteler's <q>communication</q>
+just as my informant did, and therefore spoke out
+against accepting it.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(4.) Ketteler did not hear any Bishop say, as stated
+in the telegram, that Döllinger really had the majority
+of (German) Bishops with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now let us compare Ketteler's account, deducting
+the abusive comments subjoined to every sentence,
+with the&mdash;of course extremely compressed&mdash;account in
+the telegram, and we shall find the two in substantial
+agreement. The Bishop is obliged to interpolate something
+into the telegram, in order to find fuel for the fire of
+holy indignation his delirious fancy has betrayed him
+<pb n='316'/><anchor id='Pg316'/>
+into. He quarrels with me fiercely for saying there was
+a debate and a negotiation, whereas there was only a
+conference; but I never made use of those words. He
+says he made no motion, but he himself recounts statements
+of the Bishops which show clearly that they
+understood his <q>communication</q> as an invitation to
+do as he did. Only one somewhat important point of
+difference remains, viz., whether the Bishops named in
+the telegram said what they are there reported to have
+said or not. Bishop Ketteler can only say that he did
+not hear them say it. But considering that in an informal
+meeting of forty or forty-five persons, broken up
+into groups, a great deal is said which every one in the
+room does not hear, and that I received my information
+the same day from one who was present, I still adhere
+to my assertion that they did say it. For the rest,
+I am much indebted to Bishop Ketteler; he assures us
+that he has long desired an opportunity for saying all
+the evil he can of me and my Letters. He has now
+made a grand onset. If he had found anything in the
+eighteen long Letters before him better suited to his purpose,
+he would certainly not have taken refuge in such
+petty trivialities and, like a boy with snowballs, have
+flung what has turned into water in his hand. He has
+<pb n='317'/><anchor id='Pg317'/>
+thus unwillingly given testimony to the truthfulness of
+my Letters. And for this I pardon him his exaggerated
+rhetoric, but will not suppress the remark made by an
+Englishman who knows mankind well: <q>There are
+certain women, says Fielding, always ready to raise a
+cry of <q>Murder, fire, rape</q> and the like, but that means
+no more in their mouths than any one else means in
+going over the scale, Ut, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol,</q> etc.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='318'/><anchor id='Pg318'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twenty-Seventh Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, March 8, 1870.</hi>&mdash;<q>Habemus Papam falli nescium!</q>
+The Bishops of the Manning and Deschamps
+party are in raptures; all Rome, say the Infallibilist
+devotees, is in the highest spirits. The great doctrine,
+on which, as all the Jesuits and their disciples assure us,
+hinges the salvation of humanity and the regeneration
+of science and literature, was published on March 6 in
+the form of a supplement to the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi>.
+The Pope bears witness of himself that he is infallible
+as teacher of the Church, and the great majority of the
+Council will readily assent. Already they are exulting
+in that moment of triumph when the Pope from his
+throne in the Hall, <q>sacro Concilio approbante,</q> and
+amid the pealing of all the bells in Rome, will proclaim
+to the world that it is now fortunate enough to possess an
+infallible teacher and judge in all questions of faith and
+morals, guaranteed by God Himself. Day and hour for
+<pb n='319'/><anchor id='Pg319'/>
+the proclamation will be chosen with the greatest deliberation
+and foresight, and here another ground for
+clinging so pertinaciously to the present Council Hall
+comes out. It was thought quite incomprehensible
+why <q>the master</q> insulted 750 aged men by compelling
+them, in spite of all wishes and representations and the
+evidence of his own senses, to hold their sittings in a
+Chamber so utterly unfit for the purpose. In a city so
+abounding in churches and halls as Rome this seemed
+an act rather of ill-tempered caprice than of hospitable
+care. It was known of course that the previous expectations
+of the Vatican had been disappointed, that it
+had been hoped the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> would be received by acclamation
+or by storm, as it were, without discussion,
+and that the Hall had been chosen on the very ground
+of its acoustic defects being adapted to that end. Now
+however a new recommendation of the Hall betrays
+itself. At a certain hour on a clear and cloudless day
+the rays of the sun fall exactly on the place where the
+Pope's throne stands, so that Pius may hope, by help of
+careful arrangements about the time, to stand in a glory of
+sunlight at the moment when he announces to the world
+the divine revelation of his own infallibility. It is on this
+wise, as we said before, that he has had himself represented
+<pb n='320'/><anchor id='Pg320'/>
+in the memorial picture of the proclamation of
+the Immaculate Conception. At the Coronation of
+Charles <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi> of France doves were let fly into the church.
+And so in Rome also a dove might be trained, so as
+to make it hover above the Pope at the moment of his
+apotheosis being proclaimed by his own mouth, which
+would make the effect quite irresistible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this state of things the eyes of all men are turned
+on the Bishops united, or rather not united but only
+assembled, in Council. The great majority are much
+in the disposition of the Athenians, when Alexander
+sent word to them that he had become a god, and
+wished to be worshipped as such. The popular assembly
+cried out that, if Alexander really wished to be
+a god, he was one. So say 300 Bishops: <q>We eat the
+Pope's bread and drink his wine and rest under his
+roof, so&mdash;let him be infallible.</q> And 100 Bishops say:
+<q>We are nothing but titular Bishops, with no dioceses
+or flocks; from whom but the Pope do we get our
+titles? So&mdash;let him be infallible.</q> Others again say:
+<q>We call ourselves Bishops or Vicars-Apostolic by
+favour of the Pope, and during his good pleasure. Let
+him then be infallible.</q> Lastly others say: <q>The
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> has us in its power, and we need it at every step;
+<pb n='321'/><anchor id='Pg321'/>
+the Pope must be infallible, since he desires it.</q> Thus
+we have 550 born infallibilists. And to them must be
+added those whom the Italians&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, Mamiani&mdash;call
+more curtly than courteously <q>gli Energumeni
+stranieri,</q> prelates of the Manning type <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>et id genus
+omne</foreign>, who really take part as volunteers in this campaign
+for the triumph of papal infallibility and the
+domination of souls. Many, like Sieyès formerly, will
+vote <q>la mort et sans phrase,</q> but we shall read of
+unctuous motives alleged by the volunteers for their
+votes. They want infallibility for themselves as well
+as others; for themselves, because then there will be
+no further need <q>to dig,</q> for which they have <q>neither
+hand nor foot,</q> but all doctrines will be received ready
+made, measured and cut out by the Jesuits and stamped
+and guaranteed as genuine in the Roman printing-office;
+for others, because thereby every doubt or suspicion
+or inconvenient demand in matters of doctrine
+will be summarily got rid of and suppressed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is three months to-day since the Council was
+opened. Viewed from without, the circumstances could
+hardly have been more favourable; in national diversities
+and universality of representation the assembly surpassed
+all former Councils, nor was it so obvious at the
+<pb n='322'/><anchor id='Pg322'/>
+beginning that under this bright outside was concealed
+a crying and iniquitous inequality of representation, and
+that here again the mastery was placed in the hands of
+the Italians. But how have all hopes been deceived
+now, and who had thought of this lamentable upshot!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lamartine desired of his age that Italy should produce
+<q>des hommes et non de la poussière humaine.</q>
+For three months have these 750 prelates been assembled&mdash;in
+theory the very flower of the Catholic
+world, the pastors of 180 million souls, men with a rich
+experience at their back. They were at once separated
+into two parties, one of 600 and the other of about 150.
+On which side are the men and on which the human
+dust? What have these 600 done in the three months
+they have been together, what have they brought to an
+issue, and what thoughts or sparks of intelligence have
+been struck out of this daily contact with so many high
+dignitaries from the four quarters of the world? Their
+utter sterility, aimlessness and poverty of thought&mdash;their
+passively resigning themselves to a mere assent to the
+thoughts and words of others&mdash;all this, when watched
+close at hand, makes a painful impression. It is true
+that European history since 1789 has accustomed us
+to the infirmities and follies and the unproductiveness
+<pb n='323'/><anchor id='Pg323'/>
+of great deliberative assemblies; it has become an
+every-day phenomenon, and in our days one's expectations
+from an ecclesiastical assembly can only be of the most
+moderate kind. There is no fear there of rash and hasty
+decisions or revolutionary measures. But La Bruyere's
+saying, <q>A great assembly always becomes a rabble,</q> is
+verified even at Rome, and the Italians of 1870 have
+already begun to emulate the example of their ancestors
+in 1562. Just as the majority at Trent knew how
+to reduce a disagreeable speaker to silence by wild cries
+and coughing and scraping with their feet, so is it now
+at the Vatican Council. It is the humiliating feeling
+of intellectual impotence and of deficiency alike in
+knowledge, eloquence and mind, as compared with the
+minority, from whom almost everything emanates that
+can be called life or thought in the Council. They feel
+their abject littleness, in their thankless rôle of being a
+mere echo of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> and Canons proposed, and
+having to present in so unadorned and undisguised a
+form that <q>sacrificio dell' intelletto</q> which the Jesuits
+so eagerly commend. The honour of being afterwards
+lauded, as one of the 600 organs of the Holy Ghost at
+this Council, has to be purchased rather dear. But we
+cannot in fact come to close quarters and converse with
+<pb n='324'/><anchor id='Pg324'/>
+these Bishops of the majority, without being reminded
+of the reply of a Dane to a Frenchman, who said to
+him (before the Revolution) that the highest Order in
+France was that of the Holy Ghost. <q>Notre Saint
+Esprit est un éléphant,</q> answered the Dane. But the
+situation is almost too serious for such thoughts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A synopsis of the outstanding measures has been
+presented to the Council. There are altogether 51
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign>: 3 on <q>Faith,</q> 28 on <q>Discipline,</q> 18 on
+<q>Religious Orders,</q> 2 on <q>Oriental Church affairs:</q> of
+these 39 have not yet been distributed, and 46 not
+discussed; 12 are in the hands of the Bishops, of
+which 5 have been already discussed and are to be again
+presented and examined, after being modified by the
+Commission. This is obviously matter enough for two
+years' work; yet the Council Hall and the hitherto
+irresistible and invulnerable majority will conspire to
+push the 51 <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> expeditiously through the Council,
+unabbreviated and hardly altered. If only the
+master at last praises and rewards his servants!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile 34 French Bishops have signed a Statement
+of Protest against the new order of business. I
+hear that the perversity of deciding doctrines by counting
+heads is emphatically dwelt on. The same document
+<pb n='325'/><anchor id='Pg325'/>
+has been subscribed by 33 German Bishops, with
+certain additions. Cardinals Mathieu and Rauscher,
+while professing their agreement, did not think it well
+to sign. Some 10 or 12 Germans have accepted a
+shorter but more precise and pointed address, maintaining
+the same principles. Some Orientals too have
+signed, while the deliberations of the Americans, on
+the other hand, came to no result.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such declarations are necessary for the outer world
+and for the satisfaction of their own consciences, but they
+can hardly be expected to produce any effect, nor do the
+signataries themselves anticipate any important change
+being made in the new <foreign rend='italic'>regolamento</foreign>. Would that their
+representations were formal protests, declaring that they
+would take no further part in an assembly lacking the
+necessary conditions of a true Council! But neither
+the French nor Germans could resolve on that. It
+would be hard even for a man like Dupanloup, who
+may be reckoned a leader of the Opposition, openly to
+contradict his own earlier writings about the Pope.
+The question suggests itself, If Pius, before his infallibility
+is made a dogma, has said, <q>I am the way, the
+truth, and the life,</q> what will he say when his apotheosis
+is accomplished? What words of human language
+<pb n='326'/><anchor id='Pg326'/>
+will suffice adequately to denote the sublimity of his
+position? A former saying of a member of the Italian
+aristocracy, well known for his witty remarks, occurs
+to me, <q>Gli altri Papi credevano esser Vicarii di Christo,
+ma questo Papa crede che nostro Signore sia il suo
+Vicario in cielo.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We live here in the place whereof Tacitus wrote
+eighteen centuries ago, <q>Cupido dominandi cunctis
+affectibus flagrantior est.</q><note place='foot'>Tac. <hi rend='italic'>Annal.</hi> <hi rend='smallcaps'>xv.</hi> 53.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If infallibility is defined, every member of the Roman
+Congregations has the pleasing certainty that he possesses
+<q>divinæ particulam auræ.</q> Pius is as firm and
+resolved as ever; the Jesuits have told him that, if
+the new dogma produces any confusion and scandal in
+the Church, it matters nothing&mdash;other dogmatic decisions
+have led to great confusion, but have remained
+triumphant; in a hundred years all will be quiet.
+Father Piccirillo, the editor of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> and special
+favourite of Pius, has consoled other prelates in the
+same way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi> has been compared with the
+lecture notes of a Jesuit Professor at the Collegio
+Romano, and the two are shown to agree precisely.
+<pb n='327'/><anchor id='Pg327'/>
+Even the most abject <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>-men of the majority feel
+rather ashamed of this; they had not quite expected to
+be summoned to Rome, simply in order to formulate the
+lecture notes of a Jesuit into dogmatic decrees for the
+whole Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An individual so insignificant intellectually, that I
+never expected to have any occasion for mentioning his
+name, and who is regarded in German circles as the
+standing joke of the Council, a certain Wolanski, has
+just been placed on the Congregation of the Index, as
+censor for German books. He would be utterly incompetent
+even to transcribe the work of a German
+theologian for the press. But in Rome they like, from
+time to time, to give a kick of this sort to foreigners.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Postscript.</hi>&mdash;I have just been put in a position to tell
+you something of the contents of the episcopal protest
+against the new order of business. In respect to the
+thirteenth article it is objected, that in former Councils
+a method of voting simply designed to secure expedition
+(<q>eo expedito modo</q>) has never been adopted&mdash;a
+form <q>quo nullus certe alius gravitati et maturitati
+deliberationis, imo et ipsi libertati minus favet.</q> It
+is added, that even in political assemblies the right is
+<pb n='328'/><anchor id='Pg328'/>
+granted of demanding that votes should be taken by
+calling names. It is not rapidity of decision, but prudence
+and the utmost possible security, that is the
+important point. <q>Quod in Concilio maxime refert,
+non est ut cito res expediatur, sed ut caute et tutissime
+peragatur. Longe satius est paucas quæstiones expendere
+et prudenter solvere, quam multo numerosiores
+proponere et decurtatis discussionibus suffragiisque
+præcipitanter collectis res tam graves irrevocabiliter
+definire.</q> The document goes on to protest against
+the regulation for first counting the votes of those who
+assent to the proposed decrees, and not till after this
+has been done of those who reject them. This is quite
+wrong; <q>Cum in quæstionibus fidei tutius sit sistere et
+definitionem differre, quam temere progredi, ideo conditio
+dissentientium favorabilior esse debet, et ipsis
+prioritas in dandis suffragiis excedenda esset.</q> The
+memorialists further desire that, in the definition of a
+dogma or the establishment of a canon armed with
+anathema, the votes should be orally given by <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>
+and <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>, not by rising and sitting down. And
+then great stress is laid on the point of dogmas not being
+decided by a mere majority but only by moral unanimity,
+so that any decree opposed by a considerable number of
+<pb n='329'/><anchor id='Pg329'/>
+Bishops may be held to be rejected. The Bishops say,
+<q>Cum dogmata constent Ecclesiarum consensu, ut ait
+Bellarminus,</q> moral unanimity is necessary. There is
+a further demand or request of the Bishops, <q>ut suffragia
+patrum non super <emph>toto Schemate</emph> et quasi <emph>in globo</emph>,
+sed seorsim super unâquâque definitione, super unoquoque
+Canone, per <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> aut <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign> sigillatim rogentur
+et edantur.</q> The Fathers should also be free,
+according to the Pope's previous arrangement, to give
+in their remarks in writing. But the following is the
+most important passage:&mdash;<q>Id autem quod spectat ad
+numerum suffragiorum requisitum ut quæstiones dogmaticæ
+solvantur, in quo quidem rei summa est et
+totius Concilii cardo vertitur, ita grave est, ut nonnisi
+admitteretur, quod reverenter et enixe postulamus,
+conscientia nostra intolerabili pondere premeretur.
+Timeremus, ne Concilii Œcumenici character in dubium
+vocari posset, ne ansa hostibus præberetur, S. Sedem
+et Concilium impetendi, sicque demum apud populum
+Christianum hujus Concilii auctoritas labefactaretur,
+<q>quasi veritate et libertate caruerit,</q> quod his turbatissimis
+temporibus tanta esset calamitas ut pejor excogitari
+non possit.</q> On this we might however observe
+with all respect, that a greater calamity is quite conceivable,
+<pb n='330'/><anchor id='Pg330'/>
+and that is the sanctioning of a doctrine
+exegetically, dogmatically and historically untenable
+by an assembly calling itself a Council. The Protest
+ends with these words:&mdash;<q>Spe freti futurum ut hæ
+nostræ gravissimæ animadversiones ab Eminentiis vestris
+benevolenti animo accipiantur, earumque, quae par
+est, ratio habeatur, nosmet profitemur: Eminentiarum
+Vestrarum addictissimos et obsequentissimos famulos.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='331'/><anchor id='Pg331'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twenty-Eighth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, March 9.</hi>&mdash;The decree on infallibility appeared
+on Sunday, March 6, just a year after the project was
+announced in the <hi rend='italic'>Allgemeine Zeitung</hi>. The Bishops
+knew three weeks before, through an indiscretion of
+Perrone's, that it was drawn up. But its extreme and
+unqualified form will have taken many by surprise.
+Men could hardly believe that the Roman See would
+publicly confess so huge an excess of ambition, and
+itself court a reproach of which the Catholic Church
+may indeed be cleared, but the Papacy never. The
+circumstances preceding the appearance of this composition,
+which will be a phenomenon in the world's
+history, are hardly less remarkable and significant than
+the text itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was decided on February 21, at a meeting of the
+French Cabinet presided over by the Emperor, to
+send a special ambassador to the Council. A despatch
+<pb n='332'/><anchor id='Pg332'/>
+to this effect was forwarded to Rome the same evening.
+The notion so greatly displeased the Marquis de Banneville,
+that he delayed carrying out his instructions and
+sent word of his anxieties to Paris. Here he said
+quite openly that he could remain no longer, and must
+go to Paris to get the decision reversed. He contented
+himself however with sending an <foreign rend='italic'>attaché</foreign> to France.
+At last, on March 1, the design of the French Government
+was communicated to Cardinal Antonelli, and
+three days afterwards, on March 4, the Marquis de
+Banneville came to receive his reply. The Cardinal
+was unfortunately prevented by an attack of gout
+from seeing him. And thus the answer has been
+given in the unexpected form of a dogmatic decree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not less remarkable is the coincidence of the decree
+with the publication of Count Daru's Letter. Its
+publication, which proclaims to the world the policy
+of the French Cabinet towards the Court of Rome, has
+excited the greater sensation in Rome, as it could not
+have emanated from any ordinary correspondent. The
+letter was only known to the English Government, and
+there was no copy in England except in the hands of
+the Ministry. It cannot be supposed that it would
+be offered for publication without the connivance of
+<pb n='333'/><anchor id='Pg333'/>
+Count Daru himself, and this conjecture is confirmed
+by the tone of the <hi rend='italic'>Français</hi>, Count Daru's organ, on
+the subject. It was open to it to disavow the letters,
+which are addressed to a private individual, and not,
+as the <hi rend='italic'>Times</hi> incorrectly stated, to a French prelate.
+But instead of seizing on this loophole, the <hi rend='italic'>Français</hi>
+says that the private letters of the minister contain
+nothing different from his public despatches. What
+gives these things the greater weight is that they imply
+the probability of interpellations, in Paris as well as
+in Florence, and the ministry must be presumed to be
+determined to persist to the end in the path it has
+entered upon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the clearest light is thrown on the act of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, when we look at its relation to the simultaneous
+movement among the minority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The new order of business seemed to many calculated
+to bring the internal split in the Opposition to the surface.
+To accept it was equivalent to accepting the
+dogma itself. To reject it was to intimate the resolution
+not to surrender the rights of Bishops, of whom
+St. Thomas says, <q>Obtinent in Ecclesiâ summum potestatem,</q>
+and therefore not to recognise the Pope's infallibility.
+But it has just been explained in the most
+<pb n='334'/><anchor id='Pg334'/>
+emphatic terms in Father Gratry's Letters, which are in
+the hands of all the Bishops, how difficult it is to coquet
+with the Jesuit dogmas without falling into the old
+Jesuit system of morality. However, this much desired
+division only occurred on a very limited scale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Opposition resolved to protest against the order
+of business. The Protest is said to have been drawn up
+by skilful French hands, and was subscribed on March
+4 by thirty-four French Bishops, and another, signed by
+almost the same number of German Bishops, was presented
+to the Legates two days later. A very high
+estimate is formed of its importance here. According
+to the Roman view the majority of the Council has no
+better right than the minority to proclaim a new dogma,
+for the right belongs to the Pope alone, who can just as
+well elevate the teaching of the minority as of the majority
+into a dogma. And therefore, in maintaining that
+no dogma can be defined without the universal consent&mdash;the
+moral unanimity&mdash;of the Episcopate, and that a
+Council which receives a dogma without that consent is
+liable to be rejected as not free and Œcumenical, the
+Bishops are not only protesting against the threatened
+encroachments of the majority, but just as much against
+the claim of the Pope to define dogmas by his own
+<pb n='335'/><anchor id='Pg335'/>
+authority. I have lately cited the words of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> on
+that point. In putting forward and defending their
+right and qualification to be witnesses of the faith and
+representatives of their Churches, the Bishops are not
+only vindicating a position very difficult to assail, but
+at the same time shaking the principal foundation of the
+present Council. In the first place the minority represent
+relatively far greater numbers of Catholics than
+their adversaries, and in the next place the bulk of the
+majority is artificially swelled by a crowd of prelates
+who really represent no Churches and only bear witness
+for themselves. That many of them have been
+simply created to give their services at this Council, is
+notorious. According to the official Roman register,
+fifty-one Bishops <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign> were named between June
+1866 and August 1869. By every one of these creations
+the Pope has neutralized by his own plenary
+power the vote of an Archbishop of Paris or Vienna;
+in other words, he has put some favourite Roman monsignore
+on an equality, as regards the decisions of
+the Council, with a venerable Church containing
+more than a million of souls. The presence of such
+elements in the assembly gives grounds for doubting
+whether it can be regarded as a real representation
+<pb n='336'/><anchor id='Pg336'/>
+of the whole Church, and so this declaration of the
+Bishops is like knocking a nail in the coffin of the
+Œcumenical Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have mentioned that the Protest of the French
+Bishops was handed in on March 4. That day was the
+beginning of the decisive crisis for the Opposition. The
+adhesion of the Germans was next awaited; it followed
+on the 6th March, and their example is pretty
+sure to be followed by other nations. The prospect of
+this danger, combined with the news from France,
+brought the long preconcerted resolve of the other side
+to sudden and immediate maturity. A few days
+before they had not intended to come forward with the
+decree yet. But now the great object was to cut short
+any further development on the part of the Opposition,
+and, if possible, to hinder the German Protest. The
+existing situation seems even to have influenced
+the form of the decree. For a moment the French
+middle party&mdash;Bonnechose, Lavigerie, etc.&mdash;had fancied
+a professedly moderate formula would be carried, but
+now the counsels of the most determined infallibilists
+prevailed, and the Pope, in great visible excitement,
+gave his assent to the decree in the form in which it
+has been published. This took place on March 5. The
+<pb n='337'/><anchor id='Pg337'/>
+decree is dated March 6. With the view of stopping
+the German Protest, they did not wait for the next sitting
+to distribute the printed copies to the Fathers in
+Council as usual, but sent them direct to their houses.
+This was the answer to the protesting movement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Considering that none of the former addresses of the
+minority&mdash;some twelve have been presented&mdash;have
+been taken the slightest notice of, there were of course
+the best reasons for anticipating no better fate for this
+last. But it has served another purpose. It was an
+intimation on the part of the signataries that their
+patience has reached its limits. The Protest did not
+indeed pledge them to any definite course of action.
+But it certainly imposes on them the duty of not tolerating
+anything further of the same kind, and not lending
+a hand to any decision affecting the whole future of
+the Church, under conditions they have themselves
+declared to imperil the authority and solidity of the
+Council. Either the Protest means nothing, and the
+signataries are as persuaded of its worthlessness and
+insincerity as their adversaries, or it means that they
+will not allow the great dogma to come on for discussion
+unless they obtain an assurance that no dogma
+shall be proclaimed by Pope or Council without a moral
+<pb n='338'/><anchor id='Pg338'/>
+unanimity. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> have known how to give so
+emphatic an expression to their contempt for the Opposition,
+that even the sharpest and bitterest words would
+show less scorn and insolence than their act. By
+choosing the precise moment, when the minority declare
+that their conscience is troubled and in doubt about the
+legitimacy and result of the Council altogether, for
+bringing forward the very decree which has all along
+been the main cause of that doubt and trouble of conscience,
+they proclaim plainly and emphatically that
+they know the Opposition regards its own words as
+nothing but words, and that there is no earnest manly
+decision or religious conviction behind them. The conscientiousness
+of the Opposition, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi> of the most distinguished
+French and German Bishops, could not be put
+to a prompter, a more crucial, or a more decisive
+test.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How will this test be borne? How will the doctrine
+of the Church and the honour of two nations be saved?
+The events of the next few days will decide.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='339'/><anchor id='Pg339'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Twenty-Ninth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, March 15.</hi>&mdash;Livy relates that, in the battle at
+the Thrasimene Lake, the combatants on either side,
+Romans and Carthaginians, felt nothing of the earthquake
+under their feet. Here in Rome it is not so
+much the heat of the contest that makes the great body
+of Bishops unconscious of the moral earthquake which
+has begun to shake the Church, for there is no strife in
+the ranks of the majority, and their intercourse with the
+other party is very small. But every one thinks first of
+his own home and diocese, and the Italians, Spaniards
+and South Americans&mdash;nearly 500 prelates in all&mdash;have
+abundant cause for reckoning on absolute indifference and
+ease, on a passive and generally willing assent. In those
+countries it is only money questions, the contest about
+Church property, that stirs men's minds. How much
+is to be left to the clergy or taken from them, that is
+the question here. And the Bishops hope that papal
+<pb n='340'/><anchor id='Pg340'/>
+infallibility will give some added force to the papal
+decisions on the inviolability of Church property.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the Opposition Bishops many are still in good
+spirits and full of confidence. <q>We are too many, and
+we represent too considerable portions of the Christian
+world, for our resistance to be ignored and our votes
+thrust aside,</q> is what many of them still assert. But
+the dominant party don't admit this. Antonelli says:
+<q>As soon as the Pope promulgates a decree with the
+assent of a great number of Bishops, he is infallible,
+and therefore a minority of opposing votes need not be
+attended to.</q> Naturally&mdash;for he, like other Italians,
+moves in the circle of papal infallibility which he, as
+advocate and financier, considers to belong to the
+<q>grandes idées de l'Église.</q> He would certainly, if
+asked, agree with the view of Cardinal Jacobazzi, about
+1530, that the Pope could hold an Œcumenical Council
+with one Bishop only and issue an infallible decree.
+The state of the case is this: if the decree is published
+by the Pope with the assent of the majority of the
+Council, it is ruled that the gift of infallibility has all
+along resided in the Popes alone, and that the supreme
+authority in dogmas has only been derived to General
+Councils from them, whether by their taking part in
+<pb n='341'/><anchor id='Pg341'/>
+the proceedings or confirming them. On this theory,
+even a very considerable number of opposing Bishops
+have no rights; the Pope could issue a dogmatic decree
+with the minority against the votes of the majority, for
+he and he alone would always be the organ of the Holy
+Ghost. Either no reply will be given to the complaints
+of the Bishops about the new order of business, any
+more than to their previous memorials, or they will be
+told that it is reserved to the Pope to settle whether a
+decree or <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> voted by a majority only shall be
+promulgated, since he, being alone infallible, can do
+what he pleases. In this sense the silence of Section
+14 may well be interpreted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the talk about <q>inopportuneness</q> is now quite
+at an end. I had predicted that from the first. Any
+Bishop who wanted to discuss now, whether it was the
+right time for making the new dogma, would be
+laughed at rather than listened to. It has been decided
+by 500 Bishops with the Pope that the decree is opportune,
+and in saying that the question is about the
+truth of articles of faith, not their convenience, they
+have reason and history on their side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are said to be 100 Opinions or Objections of the
+Bishops about or against the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on the Church,
+<pb n='342'/><anchor id='Pg342'/>
+already in the hands of the Commission of Faith.
+Among them is the memorial of an eminent German
+Bishop, whose bosom two souls seem to inhabit, and
+who therefore occupies the singular position at once of
+a friend of papal infallibility and an opponent of the
+definition and member of the Opposition. He read his
+paper in the meeting of German Bishops, and it was
+received with general approval, in spite of the pungent
+comments it contained on the new order of business in
+connection with the publication of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on infallibility
+a few days later, as being a disgrace to the
+Council and the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Count Trautmansdorff and M. Beust have received
+from Antonelli one of those quieting and entirely
+conciliatory answers that clerical statesman is so fond
+of pouring forth in all directions.<note place='foot'>I take this opportunity of observing that the <hi rend='italic'>Mémorial Diplomatique</hi>,
+which has the credit of supplying the world regularly with methodical
+fictions from Rome, has also given a spurious reply of Antonelli's to
+Beust's note. Perhaps one of your Paris correspondents can explain the
+rare persistency of that journal in habitually making game of the French
+with lies and inventions which are immediately exposed. Here in Rome
+many are disposed to seek the authors of them in the office of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>
+or in the <hi rend='italic'>Gesu</hi>.</note> Its substance is as
+follows: in theory, and as regards what the scholastics
+called universals, where high and far-reaching principles
+have to be established, the Church is inexorable;
+<pb n='343'/><anchor id='Pg343'/>
+there she cannot abandon an iota of her claims, and
+must draw and force home the sword of anathema.
+She must therefore necessarily pronounce modern
+civilisation, with its freedoms, a medley of soul-destroying
+errors, must raise the banner of coercion and
+forcible suppression, and accordingly condemn freedom
+of religious profession and of the press. But in practice&mdash;in
+Concordats and special Indults and concessions of
+graces&mdash;the Pope is not so strict and inexorable; there
+he is open to negotiations, and the separate Governments
+can obtain from him as a favour the actual
+toleration of what in theory he most solemnly condemns,
+of course only <foreign rend='italic'>durante beneplacito</foreign>, so long as it
+pleases him and the Governments behave well and
+don't deserve to be punished by the withdrawal of
+their indults and privileges. And that is so long as
+circumstances remain unaltered, for it is self-evident
+that, as soon as the temper of public opinion and the
+political situation become such as to offer any prospect
+of an ecclesiastical pretension being successfully urged,
+the indult will be abrogated and the practice conformed
+to the theory. Antonelli always has both pockets full
+of such distinctions between the strict and hard theory
+and the mild and indulgent pliability in practice, and
+<pb n='344'/><anchor id='Pg344'/>
+no diplomatist leaves him without such consolation.
+De Banneville has always been satisfied with the fare
+thus set before him by the Secretary of State. Trautmansdorff
+has so far the advantage, that the doctrines
+of Church and State imposed by the Court of Rome on
+the Council give the Austrian Government a very convenient
+handle for declaring the legal abolition of the
+Concordat, which is practically torn to pieces already;
+for with a Pope who has become infallible and feels
+himself called to be the supreme judge of right and
+wrong, though there may indeed be an armistice, no real
+and genuine peace and no treaty is possible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moreover nothing can be more convenient and elastic
+than the theory Antonelli expounds with all the unction
+of priestly diplomacy to the representatives of the
+European Governments. It makes everything&mdash;persons
+and institutions, governments and peoples&mdash;ultimately
+dependent on the indulgence and favour of the
+Pope. By the higher and divine law, so runs this
+doctrine, everything in the world should properly be
+differently arranged; the censorship of the Holy Office,
+religious coercion and clerical immunities, in a word
+the whole system of canon law, should flourish everywhere
+in full vigour as in the States of the Church.
+<pb n='345'/><anchor id='Pg345'/>
+But the Vicar of God is merciful; he condescends to
+the evil condition of States and of mankind, and does
+what is so easily done in Rome, he dispenses&mdash;for at
+Rome obsolete laws are maintained simply to supply
+matter for dispensations,&mdash;he declares his readiness to
+tolerate what in itself is to be condemned, out of regard
+for the unfavourable circumstances of the age, and thus
+all at last falls under the sceptre of the Pope, who rules
+at one time by favour and dispensations, at another by
+strict law. Constitutions and laws will be allowed to
+exist for awhile, and until further notice. This however
+is no recognition of them, but only an <q>indult,</q>
+for which sovereigns and statesmen and nations must
+be thankful while it lasts, but which may at any
+moment be revoked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The plan of acclamation, announced by the Jesuits as
+far back as February 1869, still counts many friends.
+There are 600 episcopal throats ready to shout, and
+these prelates had the rather get the affair settled in
+that summary fashion, because they would then be
+spared the hearing of things which bring a blush to
+many a face. For the Opposition Bishops could bring
+forward reasons and facts which, if once spoken in this
+place, would make a powerful echo and come unrefuted
+<pb n='346'/><anchor id='Pg346'/>
+before the present and future generations. Of all
+possible questions that of infallibility is certainly the
+one which can least be discussed here and before 275
+Italian prelates. What has happened in the last sittings,
+the exaltation of some and the bitterness of others,
+gives no hope of a quiet examination, but on the contrary
+leads us to expect that the majority will make the
+fullest use either of their physical preponderance or of
+the new rights given them by the Pope for reducing
+their adversaries to silence. Many who are resolved to
+gratify the Pope's desire by their <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>, are apprehensive
+that the objections of their opponents might leave the
+unpleasant taste of an unanswered argument in their
+mouths, and that the sting of a vote given without
+adequate knowledge and examination might remain
+fixed in the conscience of the Bishops. In this connection
+the answer of a North American Bishop of the
+infallibilist party is significant. He said that he remembered
+having heard, when in the theological class
+in his seminary, that the condemnation of Pope Honorius
+by the Sixth Council meant nothing, and now in his
+old age nobody could require him to study and examine
+the question for himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since the appearance of Gratry's Letters, what is most
+<pb n='347'/><anchor id='Pg347'/>
+especially dreaded is the mention and discussion of the
+forgeries and fictions that have been perpetrated for
+centuries past in the interest of the Papacy. Should
+they really come to be spoken of in the Council Hall,
+one may be quite prepared for Legate Capalti, even if
+he is not presiding, striking his bell till it bursts. The
+Italian and Spanish majority would sooner let a speaker
+teach Arianism and Pelagianism than touch on this
+sore. Cyprian, pseudo-Isidore, Anselm, Deusdedit,
+Gratian, Thomas Aquinas and Cyril&mdash;these are now
+terrible names, and hundreds here would fain stop their
+ears when they are uttered. <q>Is there then no balm in
+Gilead, no physician?</q> Just now a theologian or historian
+would be worth his weight in gold, who could
+produce evidence that all these forgeries and inventions
+are genuine monuments of Christian antiquity, and that
+the whole edifice of papal absolutism has been built up
+with the purest and most conscientious loyalty to truth.
+For this <q>horse</q> they would now, like Richard <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> of England,
+offer a kingdom. For the first time the world, with
+a free press in full possession, is to accept a new dogma
+with all its extensive belongings&mdash;to accept it in faith,
+at a time when historical criticism has attained a power
+against which Rome is impotent, and when its conclusions
+<pb n='348'/><anchor id='Pg348'/>
+pass into the literature and the common consciousness
+of all thinking men with a rapidity hitherto
+unprecedented. The works will soon be counted not
+by hundreds but by thousands, which relate and make
+capital out of the fact that from the year 500 to 1600
+deliberate fraud was at work in Rome and elsewhere
+for disseminating, supporting, and finding a basis for, the
+notion of infallibility. If they imagine in Rome that
+they can escape this power by means of the Index and
+similar fulminations, such as some French Bishops have
+hurled at Father Gratry, that is like sending a couple
+of old women with syringes to put out a palace on fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The leader and oracle of the infallibilists, Archbishop
+Manning, knows something of the contradictions of history
+to his pet dogma. He has heard something of the
+long chain of forgeries, but he demonstrates to his
+associates by a bold method of logic, that it is an article
+of faith that is at issue here, and that history and
+historical criticism can have nothing to say to it. <q>It
+is not, therefore, by criticism on past history, but by
+acts of faith in the living voice of the Church at this
+hour, that we can know the faith.</q><note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Pastoral on Infallibility of the Roman Pontiff</hi> (Longmans), p. 126.</note> The faith which
+removes mountains will be equally ready&mdash;such is
+<pb n='349'/><anchor id='Pg349'/>
+clearly his meaning&mdash;to make away with the facts of
+history. Whether any German Bishop will be found
+to offer his countrymen these stones to digest, time will
+show.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of what French infallibilists are capable has been
+evidenced in the case of Bishop Pie of Poictiers, who
+is, next to Plantier of Nîmes, the leader of this
+faction. He introduces into his Lenten Pastoral the
+history of Uzza, who wanted, with a good object, to
+support the tottering Ark, and was punished by being
+burned to death. The Ark, he says, is the Church and
+its doctrine, and whoever touches it with the best intentions,
+be he layman or priest, commits a grievous
+crime and audacious sacrilege, which must bring down
+on his head the most terrible wrath of God. The
+animals, which draw the waggon containing the Ark,
+are the Bishops. If then, proceeds Pie, any of these
+oxen swerve from the road and kick (<foreign rend='italic'>regimbent</foreign>), there
+are plenty more at hand to bring back the cart into the
+right track, for&mdash;and here the oxen suddenly become
+horses (<foreign rend='italic'>coursiers</foreign>)&mdash;all the steeds of the sacred cart do
+not stumble at the same time. Thus does this prelate
+expound to his flock the position of the majority and
+minority at the Council, and for their full consolation
+<pb n='350'/><anchor id='Pg350'/>
+he adds: <q>Moreover there is one supreme and divinely
+enlightened driver of the cart, who is liable to no error,
+and he will know how to deal with the shying and
+stumbling of the horses.</q> According to Bishop Pie
+therefore, the waggon of the Church is sometimes
+drawn by horses&mdash;the Opposition who make <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>sou-bresaut</foreign>
+and <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>écarts</foreign>; sometimes by steady-going oxen&mdash;the
+great majority,&mdash;and among these last the Bishop of
+Poictiers with amiable modesty reckons himself. If
+the readers of the <hi rend='italic'>Allgemeine Zeitung</hi> doubt whether a
+highly respected leader of the majority and member of
+the Commission on Faith has really written such nonsense,
+I can only refer them to the document itself,
+which will no doubt be reprinted in the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi> or
+<hi rend='italic'>Monde</hi>.<note place='foot'>It is also quoted in the <hi rend='italic'>Journal des Débats</hi> of March 12. [This same
+Bishop opened the debate on the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Romano Pontifice</hi> by arguing
+that the Pope must be infallible, because St. Peter was crucified head
+downwards. <hi rend='italic'>Cf. infr.</hi> Letter <ref target='Letter_XLVI'>xlvi</ref>.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are many indications that the wishes of the
+clique of zealots, who wanted to get the infallible Pope
+made out of hand on St. Joseph's day, will not be realized,
+but that a longer interval will have to be allowed.
+The <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> <q>on Faith</q> prepared by the Commission,
+viz., by the above-named Bishop Pie, and containing
+<pb n='351'/><anchor id='Pg351'/>
+the philosophical and theological matter for the Council,
+was to have been distributed last week, and even
+Bishops of the minority had received professedly confidential
+notice of it; but no such distribution took
+place. So the Session of this week too will fall through,
+and it is not easy to see how this first fruit of the
+Council can well be imparted to the expectant world
+before Easter. And here I constantly come across the
+view that the postponement of the discussion on the
+grand <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi>, with the article on infallibility,
+is done with a purpose. The Opposition is still
+too strong and compact; it is hoped that some members
+will be detached from it every week, and that several
+will leave Rome; some Austrians are gone already.
+Everything depends on making the Opposition so small
+and weak, that they may be walked over, and may seem
+only to exist as a captive band of German Barbarians
+to grace the triumphal procession of the Latins, and
+then to be surrendered to those <q>exécuteurs des hautes
+œuvres de la justice de Rome,</q> MM. Veuillot and Maguelonne,
+the editors of the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi> and the <hi rend='italic'>Correspondance
+de Rome</hi>.<note place='foot'>The <hi rend='italic'>Unita Cattolica</hi> of March 12 makes its Roman correspondent say
+that to-day the Bishops are signing in crowds a Petition to the Presidents
+of the Council, demanding that the discussion of the article on infallibility
+may take precedence of all other business, because they long to put an end
+at one blow to the scandal of the Liberal Catholics and Gallicans. But
+Margotti's journal at the same time urges patience on its readers, because
+decorum must be preserved, as far as may be.</note> This delay is of course a severe trial of
+<pb n='352'/><anchor id='Pg352'/>
+patience for the majority who are hungering after the
+new bread of faith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I will not conceal that even among the highest
+Roman dignitaries the infallibilist dogma provokes
+expressions of discontent. Are they honestly and
+sincerely meant? The voting will show. The <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>mot
+d'ordre</foreign> has gone forth to correspondents of foreign
+journals, to say that the whole Opposition is thoroughly
+broken up, and that some are deserting and the rest
+running away. But as yet these are wishes rather than
+facts. As far as I can see, the French and German
+Bishops, who wish to maintain the ancient doctrine of
+the Church and reject the new dogma, hold firmly
+together. Some Bishops said, directly after the publication
+of the supplementary <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on infallibility, that
+their only choice lay between a schism or a false
+doctrine; nothing else was left them except to resign
+their Sees. And your readers would be astonished if
+I could venture to mention their names&mdash;names of the
+highest repute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The war of extermination against the Theological
+<pb n='353'/><anchor id='Pg353'/>
+Faculties of the German Universities is to be energetically
+carried on. The Bishop of Ratisbon's measure is
+only a premonitory feeler. Some particular exceptions
+however might be made, as long as the chairs were filled
+by pupils of the Jesuits. The German College is now
+to be the nursery for professors of theology and
+philosophy at German Seminaries and High Schools.
+This reminds one of the Alexandrian Psaphon, who
+kept a whole aviary of parrots, and taught them to
+scream, <q>Great is the God, Psaphon,</q> and then let
+them fly, so that they carried over land and sea the
+fame of his godhead. In Rome there is fortunately an
+abundance of such aviaries. There are colleges here
+for England, Scotland, Ireland, France, Germany and
+Hungary, Belgium, Poland, and North and South
+America, and thousands of their inmates have already
+been indoctrinated in Psaphon's fashion.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='354'/><anchor id='Pg354'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Thirtieth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, March 20, 1870.</hi>&mdash;At last the greatest theologian
+of Catholic England, in fact the only man of
+learning there who would be called in Germany a real
+theologian, has spoken out in the great controversy.
+Dr. Newman is superior of the Birmingham Oratory.
+It has long been notorious that he deplored the condition
+of the English (Catholic) Church, which has for
+many years been brought under the convert yoke, and
+sympathized with the old Catholics, both clergy and
+laity, who are now crushed under it; so much so, that
+the convert party there tried to brand him with the
+reputation of heterodoxy, and strangers intending to
+visit the illustrious Oratorian were warned not to incur
+suspicion by doing so. Newman had accordingly
+maintained a persistent silence in the controversies
+going on in England, desirous as everybody was and is
+to know his judgment upon the question which is now
+<pb n='355'/><anchor id='Pg355'/>
+<q>gladius animam Ecclesiæ pertransiens.</q> But in the
+midst of this silence he had opened his heart, in a letter
+to a Bishop who is a friend of his own, on the uncomfortable
+and dangerous position into which an <q>aggressive
+and insolent faction</q> has brought the Church,
+and disturbed so many of the truest souls. He says:<note place='foot'>[It seemed better to give the Letter itself, as published <q>by permission</q>
+in the <hi rend='italic'>Standard</hi> of April 7, rather than to translate the secondhand,
+though remarkably accurate, paraphrase given in the German text. It
+addressed to Bishop Ullathorne.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>... Such letters, if they could be circulated,
+would do much to reassure the many minds
+which are at present distressed when they look towards
+Rome.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Rome ought to be a name to lighten the heart at
+all times, and a Council's proper office is, when some
+great heresy or other evil impends, to inspire hope and
+confidence in the faithful; but now we have the
+greatest meeting which ever has been, and that at
+Rome, infusing into us by the accredited organs of
+Rome and of its partisans (such as the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> [the
+<hi rend='italic'>Armonia</hi>], the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>, and the <hi rend='italic'>Tablet</hi>) little else than
+fear and dismay. When we are all at rest, and have
+no doubts, and&mdash;at least practically, not to say doctrinally&mdash;hold
+the Holy Father to be infallible, suddenly
+<pb n='356'/><anchor id='Pg356'/>
+there is thunder in the clearest sky, and we are told to
+prepare for something, we know not what, to try our
+faith, we know not how. No impending danger is to
+be averted, but a great difficulty is to be created. Is
+this the proper work of an Œcumenical Council?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>As to myself personally, please God, I do not
+expect any trial at all; but I cannot help suffering
+with the many souls who are suffering, and I look with
+anxiety at the prospect of having to defend decisions
+which may not be difficult to my own private judgment,
+but may be most difficult to maintain logically
+in the face of historical facts.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>What have we done to be treated as the faithful
+never were treated before? When has a definition <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>de
+fide</foreign> been a luxury of devotion and not a stern, painful
+necessity? Why should an aggressive, insolent faction
+be allowed to <q>make the heart of the just sad, whom
+the Lord hath not made sorrowful</q>? Why cannot we
+be let alone when we have pursued peace and thought
+no evil?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>I assure you, my lord, some of the truest minds are
+driven one way and another, and do not know where to
+rest their feet&mdash;one day determining <q>to give up all
+theology as a bad job,</q> and recklessly to believe henceforth
+<pb n='357'/><anchor id='Pg357'/>
+almost that the Pope is impeccable, at another
+tempted to <q>believe all the worst which a book like
+Janus says,</q>&mdash;others doubting about <q>the capacity possessed
+by bishops drawn from all corners of the earth
+to judge what is fitting for European society,</q> and then,
+again, angry with the Holy See for listening to <q>the
+flattery of a clique of Jesuits, Redemptorists, and converts.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Then, again, think of the store of Pontifical scandals
+in the history of eighteen centuries, which have
+partly been poured forth and partly are still to come.
+What Murphy inflicted upon us in one way M. Veuillot
+is indirectly bringing on us in another. And then
+again the blight which is falling upon the multitude of
+Anglican ritualists, etc., who themselves, perhaps&mdash;at
+least their leaders&mdash;may never become Catholics, but
+who are leavening the various English denominations
+and parties (far beyond their own range) with principles
+and sentiments tending towards their ultimate absorption
+into the Catholic Church.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>With these thoughts ever before me, I am continually
+asking myself whether I ought not to make my
+feelings public; but all I do is to pray those early
+doctors of the Church, whose intercession would decide
+<pb n='358'/><anchor id='Pg358'/>
+the matter (Augustine, Ambrose, and Jerome, Athanasius,
+Chrysostom, and Basil) to avert this great
+calamity.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>If it is God's will that the Pope's infallibility be
+defined, then is it God's will to throw back <q>the times
+and moments</q> of that triumph which He has destined
+for His kingdom, and I shall feel I have but to bow
+my head to His adorable, inscrutable Providence.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You have not touched upon the subject yourself,
+but I think you will allow me to express to you feelings
+which, for the most part, I keep to myself....</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus writes Newman in most glaring contrast to
+Manning. The latter was long nothing but his admiring
+disciple, and does not possess a tenth part of the
+learning of his master. He owes simply to his infallibilist
+zeal acquired in Rome his elevation to the
+Archbishopric of Westminster, to which the Pope
+appointed him, in anticipation of his present services,
+against the will of the English Catholics and the election
+of the Bishops. The Roman correspondent of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Standard</hi> having published extracts from Newman's
+letter, he took occasion to come forward and say that
+he had no wish to conceal that he <q>deeply deplored
+the policy, the spirit, the measures of various persons
+<pb n='359'/><anchor id='Pg359'/>
+lay and ecclesiastical, who are urging the definition of
+that theological opinion</q> (of papal infallibility), while
+on the other hand he has <q>a firm belief that a greater
+power than that of any man or set of men will overrule
+the deliberations of the Council to the determination
+of Catholic and Apostolic truth, and what its
+Fathers eventually proclaim <emph>with one voice</emph> will be the
+Word of God.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No one knows better than Newman that, next to the
+Jesuits, two of his old Oxford friends and disciples, Manning
+and Ward, are the chief authors of the whole infallibilist
+agitation. Well for him that he does not live
+in Manning's diocese! In the English clerical journals,
+<hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, the <hi rend='italic'>Weekly Register</hi>, the fact has lately several times
+come to light, that English priests who utter a word
+against infallibility are promptly reduced to silence by
+threats of suspension and deprivation. Every infallibilist,
+who has the power, is also a terrorist, for he feels
+instinctively that free and open discussion would be
+the death of his darling dogma. Under these circumstances
+it is very significant that some of the English
+Bishops are bold and honest enough to speak their
+minds plainly, to the effect that the English Catholics
+had gained all their political rights on the repeated assurance,
+<pb n='360'/><anchor id='Pg360'/>
+and with the express condition, that the doctrine
+of papal infallibility would not be taught and
+received in the English Church, and that on that
+ground they have felt bound to repudiate this opinion.
+The chief among these Bishops are Clifford, Bishop of
+Clifton, and Archbishop Errington.<note place='foot'>[Archbishop Errington was Cardinal Wiseman's coadjutor with right of
+succession, but was arbitrarily deprived of the post by the Pope, on his
+declining to resign it. His name was the first of the three sent to Rome
+by the Chapter of Westminster for the vacant Archbishopric on Cardinal
+Wiseman's death, the other two being Clifford and Grant. All three were
+passed over in favour of Dr. Manning.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I can give you the precise facts of the affair about
+Montalembert's Requiem from the most authentic
+sources, and it is worth while to do so, for it speaks
+volumes on the present state of things. The news of
+his death had reached Rome some hours, when a considerable
+number of foreigners, chiefly French, were
+admitted to an audience with the Pope. Immediately
+after the first words of blessing and encouragement,
+which they had come to request of him, Pius went on
+to speak of the man whose death had just been announced
+to him, saying that he had done great services
+to the Church, <q>mais il était malheureusement de ces
+Catholiques libéraux qui ne sont que demi-catholiques.
+Il y a quelques jours il écrivait des paroles</q>&mdash;here the
+<pb n='361'/><anchor id='Pg361'/>
+Pope made a pause, and then proceeded&mdash;<q>Enfin,
+j'espère qu'il est bien mort</q>&mdash;or probably <q>qu'il a fait
+une bonne mort</q>&mdash;<q>L'orgueil était son principal défaut,
+c'est lui qui l'a égaré.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While this was going on in the Vatican, Bougaud,
+one of the Vicar-Generals of the Bishop of Orleans, was
+inviting his countrymen from the pulpit of the French
+church of St. Louis to a Requiem for the illustrious
+dead, to be held next day in the church of Ara Celi.
+Archbishop Merode, Grand Almoner of the Pope and
+brother-in-law of Montalembert, had so arranged it, because
+it is an ancient privilege of the Roman patricians
+to have funeral services solemnized for them in this
+church, and Montalembert had been named a patrician
+by Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> in recognition of his services in restoring
+the States of the Church and bringing back the Pope
+to Rome. He had contributed more than any of his
+contemporaries to that restoration, and it was he whose
+speech in the National Assembly at Paris in 1848 had
+decided the question of the Roman expedition. Bougaud
+had also mentioned that. Many had heard on the
+day before the service that it had been suddenly forbidden;
+nevertheless at the appointed hour in the
+morning about twenty French Bishops appeared with
+<pb n='362'/><anchor id='Pg362'/>
+many priests and a large assemblage of laymen, the
+<foreign rend='italic'>élite</foreign> of the French visitors now in Rome. There before
+the entrance of the church they found M. Veuillot, the
+old and implacable opponent and accuser of Montalembert,
+standing among a group of sacristy officials, who
+announced to all comers that the Pope had forbidden
+any service being held or any prayers offered there
+for the departed Count. They thought this incredible
+and forced their way into the church, and here the
+sacristans informed them that, by special order of the
+Pope, not only was the intended Requiem stopped but
+the usual masses must be suspended, as long as the
+French remained in the church. By degrees the congregation
+broke up, and about an hour afterwards, when
+the church was empty, a French priest contrived to say
+a low mass in a side chapel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was probably Banneville who intimated to the
+Pope, at his audience for taking leave on the 17th,
+what a feeling this had created in French circles in
+Rome, and what impression it must produce in France.
+So on the morning of Friday the 18th, to the amazement
+of the court officials, the Pope went to Sta. Maria
+Transpontana, an out-of-the-way church, without his
+usual cortége. Several Bishops passed the church on
+<pb n='363'/><anchor id='Pg363'/>
+their way to the Council, and were surprised to see the
+Pope's carriage waiting at the door, as they knew
+nothing of what had taken him there. In the church
+the Pope sent orders to a Bishop to say mass <q>for a certain
+Charles,</q> at which he assisted, and the following
+notice then appeared in the <hi rend='italic'>Giornale di Roma</hi>: <q>His
+Holiness, in consideration of the former services of
+Count Montalembert, ordered a mass to be celebrated
+for him in Sta. Maria Transpontana, and himself assisted
+at it from the tribune.</q> Meanwhile the journalists
+were instructed to say in their correspondence columns,
+that the prohibition had been issued, because the
+Requiem was meant to be made into a demonstration.<note place='foot'>[This explanation, that the Requiem <q>was intended rather as a political
+demonstration than a religious act,</q> was elaborately insisted on in
+the <hi rend='italic'>Tablet</hi> of March 28, which added the guarded but equally gratuitous
+statement that <q>the Bishop of Orleans, <emph>it appears</emph>, intended to speak at
+the funeral service;</q> winding up with the somewhat remarkable comment
+that <q>the prudence and the charity (!) of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> have been equally conspicuous
+in the affair.</q> The world hardly seems to see it.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+That insinuation implicates Archbishop Merode also,
+who resides in the Vatican, for he had given the order.
+The charge of pride, which the Pope brought against
+Montalembert, will excite astonishment and something
+more in France, where it was precisely his gentleness
+and modesty that had made him so universally beloved.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='364'/><anchor id='Pg364'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Thirty-First Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, March 21, 1870.</hi>&mdash;A feeling of weariness,
+lethargy and disgust has been forced on many Bishops
+by the treatment they have received and the whole
+course of affairs in the Council up to this time. The
+news of its dissolution would be welcome tidings to
+their ears. And not only strangers, but many residents
+here, would joyfully hail their deliverance from the
+existing situation; even one of the Legates said lately
+that, if the Council were to be suddenly dissolved by a
+death, the Church would be freed from a great distress.
+The Assembly Hall alone would suffice to disgust a
+prelate with the idea of taking part in a Council
+for the rest of his life. Yet they are obliged to
+sit hours in this comfortless chamber, without understanding
+what is said. A sense of time unprofitably
+wasted is the only result of many a sitting
+for men, to whom at home every hour is precious for
+the care of a large diocese. They say that, for the first
+<pb n='365'/><anchor id='Pg365'/>
+time since Councils came into being, the Bishops
+have been robbed of their essential and inalienable right
+of free speech on questions of faith; that they are compelled
+to vote, but not allowed to give reasons for their
+vote and bear witness to the doctrine of their Churches.
+They complain that, though they can hand in written
+observations, no one but the Commission of twenty-four
+knows anything about them, and that for the Council
+itself and their fellow Bishops they can do nothing.
+The Commission will perhaps present a summary report
+of a hundred of these memorials and counter
+representations, according to the new order of business.
+This means that the work carefully matured by a Bishop
+through weeks or months of severe study will be summed
+up in two or three words, and in the shape it is thrown
+into by a hostile Committee. If the Bishops regard it as
+an intolerable oppression at home to have to submit their
+Pastorals for previous inspection to their Governments,
+here they can have nothing printed, even after it has
+undergone the censorship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is no mere phrase, when the Bishops say in their
+Protest against the new order of business that their
+consciences are intolerably burdened, and that the Œcumenical
+character of the Council is likely to be assailed
+<pb n='366'/><anchor id='Pg366'/>
+and its authority fundamentally shaken (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>labefacteretur</foreign>).
+They consider the arrangement for deciding doctrines by
+simply counting heads intolerable, and they recognise as
+of immeasurable importance, and the very turning-point
+of the whole Council (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>totius Concilii cardo vertitur</foreign>), the
+question as to the necessary conditions of a definition of
+faith binding the consciences of all the faithful. The
+Pope wants to have a new article of faith made by the
+Council, on the acceptance or rejection of which every
+man's salvation or condemnation is henceforth to depend.
+And now this same Pope has overthrown the
+principle always hitherto acknowledged in the Church,
+that such decrees could only be passed unanimously,
+and has made the opposite principle into a law.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Opposition Bishops are well aware that any
+regular examination and discussion of the infallibility
+question is rendered impossible by the nature of the
+Council Hall and the plan of voting by majorities.
+They have therefore proposed to the Legates that a
+deputation of several Bishops chosen from among themselves
+should be associated with the Commission on
+Faith, or with certain Bishops of the majority, to discuss
+the form of the decree, and that, when they have
+come to a common understanding, the formula as finally
+<pb n='367'/><anchor id='Pg367'/>
+agreed upon should be submitted to the vote of the
+Council in full assembly. The authorities will not
+readily yield to this demand on many accounts, and
+chiefly because what Tacitus said of the Roman people
+1800 years ago is well understood at Rome now, <q>Juvit
+credulitatem nox et promptior inter tenebras affirmatio.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a prudent foresight which led the Pope so
+strictly to prohibit the Bishops from printing anything
+here during the sitting of the Council; the Jesuits of
+the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> must retain their exclusive monopoly of free
+speech. But such conferences as the minority wished
+for were no less dangerous than printing, and would
+naturally lead to the grounds of their decision being
+made public. They have been summoned to affirm, not to
+deny, and <q>promptior inter tenebras affirmatio.</q> Meanwhile
+the Germans say that a thorough sifting of the
+question is the first thing necessary to be insisted upon,
+and that for two reasons: first to satisfy their own consciences,
+and secondly for the sake of their flocks. For
+they would not think it enough to enforce the new
+dogmas on the faithful of their dioceses by mere official
+acts and by referring them to the authority of the Council,
+which is ultimately reduced to the authority of the
+Pope, but would feel bound to give them sufficient
+<pb n='368'/><anchor id='Pg368'/>
+reasons for its acceptance; and they have not been able
+to discover the cogency of these reasons themselves.
+Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> considers this superfluous. He feels his infallibility,
+as he says, and therefore thinks it very scandalous
+that the Bishops do not choose to be content with
+this testimony of his feeling. However, the negotiations
+with the Legates about these conferences are
+still going on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must be allowed that there is not the slightest
+exaggeration in the words of the seventy-six protesting
+Bishops. It is strictly true that the new order of business,
+if it is carried out, must raise the greatest doubts
+as to the Œcumenical character of the Council among
+all thinking Catholics, especially such as are familiar
+with the history of Councils. And it is undeniable that
+this would excite a terrible disturbance in the Church,
+a contest the end of which cannot be foreseen. The
+Jesuits are now stirring the fire with the same assiduity
+and malicious pleasure as their predecessors in the
+Order of 1713 and the following years, when the whole
+of France and the Netherlands was plunged into a state
+of ecclesiastical strife and confusion by the Bull <hi rend='italic'>Unigenitus</hi>,
+which they procured. They enjoy such contests,
+and have always carried them through with the merciless
+<pb n='369'/><anchor id='Pg369'/>
+harshness which is peculiar to them, relying on the
+strength of their organization. It may sound hard that
+the Order should so often be reproached with making its
+members at once accusers and bailiffs, but they would
+themselves consider this rather a note of praise than of
+blame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The retribution for their conduct in 1713 and afterwards
+came in 1763 and 1773. But the Order, or at
+least its Roman members, who are all-powerful through
+the favour of the Pope, have no fear of such consequences
+now. A Jesuit can make a home for his theology,
+now here now there. If the Order is driven from
+one country, it is received into another; its property is
+moveable and can be transferred easily and without loss,
+and moreover it possesses, so to speak, an itinerant
+mint in its carefully elaborated skill in the direction of
+female souls, whether lodged in male or female bodies.
+They are thorough adepts too in the speculations of the
+money market, and manage their transactions in banknotes
+as successfully as the most practised merchant, so
+that they are quietly but surely recovering their prosperity
+in many cities of the Italian Kingdom, even in
+Florence, while all other Orders have been suppressed
+there. So they are well equipped and in excellent
+<pb n='370'/><anchor id='Pg370'/>
+spirits for meeting the future. If their system of doctrine
+is now raised to full dominion by Pope and Council,
+and if they succeed in the next Conclave in procuring
+the election of a Pope thoroughly devoted to them and
+resolved to carry on the present system, the ship of the
+Order will ride majestically on the waves of future
+events, and fear no storms. A thoroughly well-informed
+man has assured us that the Pope said the other day to
+a Roman prelate, that <q>the Jesuits had involved him
+in this business of the Council and infallibility, and he
+was determined now to go through with it, cost what it
+might. They must take the responsibility of the results.</q>
+A very similar statement was made by the
+Emperor Francis <hi rend='smallcaps'>i.</hi> He said that <q>he could not tell
+how his finance minister would answer hereafter for
+having precipitated so many men into poverty and
+misery by establishing a national bankruptcy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the fourth or fifth time since the opening of the
+Council, the ultramontane correspondents have been
+instructed to say, that the acoustic defects of the Hall
+have been remedied through new arrangements. This
+is not true; the speeches are never understood in many
+parts of the Chamber, not even where the secretaries sit.
+Meanwhile the Pope has conceived a desire to appear
+<pb n='371'/><anchor id='Pg371'/>
+again in the midst of the Bishops and hold a Solemn
+Session. Hitherto he has been invisible and generally
+unapproachable to his <q>venerable brethren,</q> as he officially
+styles them. The last time the assembly saw
+him was at the unsuccessful Solemn Session of January
+6, when the Bishops had to go through the useless
+ceremony of swearing oaths, in order to fill up the
+vacant time. For Pius does not feel that there is the
+slightest need for ascertaining the views of the Bishops
+about the measures in hand, or their wishes and proposals,
+and hearing their report of the state of Church
+matters in their own countries. He stands too high
+for that. A French prelate remarked lately that the
+Council does not thrive, because the Pope stands at
+once too near it and too far from it&mdash;so near that he
+robs it of all freedom, so far that there is no community
+of feeling and views and understanding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There has never indeed been a period in Church
+history where it has been made so palpably plain to
+the Episcopate how much the name of <q>brother,</q>
+which the Pontifex gives to every Bishop, is worth, and
+how immeasurable is the gulf between the <q>brother</q>
+on the Roman throne, the Pope-King, and the brother
+in Paris or Vienna or Prague.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='372'/><anchor id='Pg372'/>
+
+<p>
+On the 16th a part of the first <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> was distributed
+in a revised form, and a General Congregation was held
+upon it on the 18th, at the very time when the Pope
+was hearing a mass for Montalembert in reparation for
+his treatment of the illustrious dead on the 15th and
+16th. He wanted to hold a Solemn Session on the 25th,
+and thought there would be some decrees ready to be
+published. In defiance of the order of business the
+Bishops had only a day and a half, instead of ten days,
+allowed them to get acquainted with the revised text.
+However, so large a number of speakers sent in their
+names, and so many new difficulties came to light, that
+Pius had once more to abandon his design of proclaiming
+new articles of faith on that day to the expectant
+world. It looks as if the fourth month of the Council
+would pass by with as little result as the three first.
+Easter Monday is already named as the period fixed for
+publishing the first doctrinal decree. Meanwhile a new
+power has been introduced in the person of the Jesuit,
+Kleutgen. He had been condemned some time ago by
+the Holy Office on account of a scandal in a convent.
+But he has now been rehabilitated, as the Jesuits have
+no superfluity of theologians, and is to take part in
+drawing up the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign>. The time fixed for sending
+<pb n='373'/><anchor id='Pg373'/>
+in representations on the infallibility decree has been
+extended for ten days more, to the 25th. There is no
+lack of criticisms and counter-statements; the Bishops,
+although foreseeing that their intellectual progeny will
+be strangled directly after birth, seem anxious to gain
+the satisfaction of saying, <q>dixi et salvavi animam
+meam.</q> The German Bishops remember the assurances
+they gave at Fulda. The Archbishop of Cologne reminded
+the faithful of his diocese, as late as Feb. 9,
+of this Pastoral, to set their minds at rest. To-day,
+March 21, in view of the infallibilist <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> and the
+new order of business, he would no doubt hardly think
+it prudent to say any longer to the Germans, <q>Be confident
+that the Council will establish no new dogma,
+and proclaim nothing which is not written by faith and
+conscience on your hearts.</q> The Germans will now be
+curious to see the circumlocutions and explanations
+appended, in the fresh Pastorals compiled after the
+fabrication of the new dogma, to the Pastoral issued
+from the tomb of St. Boniface.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Bishops should take care that they are not, like
+the eagle in the Libyan fable, struck with arrows
+feathered from their own wings. Banneville, who
+succeeded two men very unacceptable in Rome, Lavalette
+<pb n='374'/><anchor id='Pg374'/>
+and Sartiges, was amicably received, and found it
+agreeable to keep on the best footing with Antonelli,
+and to treat the whole affair of the Council easily
+and superficially. Whatever he said was always very
+mildly expressed. It was so convenient to enjoy the
+favour both of the Pope and the Secretary of State, and
+to be commended by the majority of the Council as
+a pious and enlightened statesman. The differences
+between him and Count Daru were accordingly inevitable.
+For Daru appreciates the extent of the danger,
+not only as a statesman but as a zealous Catholic, while
+Banneville's one thought has ever been to please the
+Roman authorities, so that a French prelate said to him
+shortly before his departure, <q>Pensiez-vous que vous
+étiez ambassadeur auprès de Jésuites?</q> And thus at
+last the necessity of instructing him has been recognised
+at Paris. But at the same time Bishop Forcade of
+Nevers has been sent there, intrusted with the mission
+of representing Banneville's conduct to the Government
+as exactly right, and advocating the views and
+desires of Antonelli and the majority of the Council.
+He has told them at Paris that the majority do not want
+to hear anything of the admission of a French ambassador
+to the Council&mdash;which is credible enough&mdash;but
+<pb n='375'/><anchor id='Pg375'/>
+that the Government has nothing to fear from the
+decrees, for the Court of Rome would in any case
+respect the Concordat. Antonelli, as may be seen,
+abides by his panacea. The only question is whether
+they are disposed at Paris to be paid with such diplomatic
+counters. Meanwhile it has been rumoured that
+Count Daru would send a memorial to the Council.
+To the Council? Say rather to the Pope and his
+Secretary of State. This putting forward of the Council,
+whose freedom and self-determination the Roman
+Court is neither able nor willing to anticipate, is a
+device which no one can take seriously. The Bishop of
+Orleans in his last publication has pierced a hole in the
+mask, which renders it nearly useless. He remarks
+(p. 54), <q>Whatever is to come before the Council can
+only come through the Commission appointed by the
+Pope, that is ultimately through himself. He is the
+master, the sole and absolute master, with whom it
+rests to admit a proposal or set it aside.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Antonelli says that no ambassadors can be admitted,
+for if it were conceded to the French, it could not be
+refused to other powers, Austria, Bavaria, or even
+Prussia. He is quite right there. It has been a main
+object from the first with this Council to give a striking
+<pb n='376'/><anchor id='Pg376'/>
+example of the entire exclusion of the lay element
+in ecclesiastical deliberations. It is just because the
+Governments and States are so deeply concerned in
+the projected decrees, because their rights and laws
+and their whole future are affected, that they are not
+to be heard or admitted. In presence of the representative
+of his Government, many a Bishop would think
+twice before assenting to a decree flatly contradicting
+the laws and political principles of his country. And
+then the admission of ambassadors would break through
+the mystery, and make the strict silence imposed on
+the Bishops almost useless. A large number of them,
+and above all the entire Opposition, would be very
+glad of this, but for that very reason the ruling powers
+detest it the more. As a foretaste and practical illustration
+of what the maxims of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi> will
+lead to, when made into dogmas, it is worth while to
+notice the decision issued by the Pope and his Penitentiary
+in September 1869, when this Schema had
+just been drawn up, on the question whether a priest
+could swear to observe the Austrian Constitution. To
+take the oath absolutely was forbidden; he can only
+take it with an express reservation of the laws of the
+Church, and&mdash;which is very significant&mdash;he must state
+<pb n='377'/><anchor id='Pg377'/>
+publicly that he only takes the oath, even with this
+reservation, by virtue of papal permission. That is a
+new and very important step on the road to be trodden
+with the aid of the Council. Every clergyman is to be
+reminded, and to remind others, in merely discharging
+a simple civil obligation, that he is dependent on the
+Pope in the matter, and may not properly speaking
+swear civil fealty and obedience to the laws without
+papal permission, not even in the conditional form which
+makes the oath itself illusory. This is quite after the
+mind of the Jesuits, who have always shown a special
+predilection for the doctrine that every cleric is not a
+subject and citizen with corresponding rights, but simply
+a subaltern and servant of the Pope. This is a prologue
+to the twenty-one Canons of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have just learnt from the <hi rend='italic'>Kölner Volkszeitung</hi> that
+the chaplain of a prelate here charges me with a gross
+falsehood in reference to the words of the Pope. He
+appeals to the Paris <hi rend='italic'>Union</hi>, which has the words used
+by the Pope, <q>Je suis la voie, la vérité, et la vie,</q> with the
+passage inserted by the editor. I had cited the words
+from the <hi rend='italic'>Observateur Catholique</hi> of 1866 (p. 357), where
+they are authenticated by the signature of an ear-witness,
+MacSheeby, and correspond entirely with the statement
+<pb n='378'/><anchor id='Pg378'/>
+of the <hi rend='italic'>Union</hi>. But in the <hi rend='italic'>Monde</hi>, which was not in my
+reach, a totally different version is given, which has
+no similarity to that authenticated by Roman correspondents
+in the <hi rend='italic'>Union</hi> and <hi rend='italic'>Observateur</hi>, and does not
+connect the words, <q>I am the way,</q> etc., with the Pope
+at all. It must remain uncertain after this whether
+the version of the <hi rend='italic'>Monde</hi> or of the two other journals
+is the genuine one.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='379'/><anchor id='Pg379'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<anchor id='Letter_XXXII'/>
+<head>Thirty-Second Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, March 28, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The Bishops who have
+attacked the new order of business, because it brought
+into view the possibility of a dogmatic definition being
+carried without the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>consensus moraliter unanimis</foreign>, received
+the desired answer in no doubtful form at the
+sitting of Tuesday, the 22d. The measures of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> for a month past have been unmistakably contributing
+more and more to produce a worthy and loyal-hearted
+attitude among the minority. After long dallying,
+Rome has brought the secrets of her policy a little
+too boldly and conspicuously into view. Hardly was
+the domination of the majority in matters of faith fixed
+by the stricter <foreign rend='italic'>regolamento</foreign>, when the Pope had the proclamation
+of his own infallibility proposed in the most
+arrogant form. On this followed the attempt to press
+it to an immediate decision, and then the determination
+to admit no ambassadors of the Governments. If these
+<pb n='380'/><anchor id='Pg380'/>
+proceedings were not enough to lay bare the perilous
+nature of the whole situation, the Pope and the zealots
+of his party supplied the remaining proof,&mdash;the former,
+by his conduct about Falloux, about Montalembert on
+the day the news of his death arrived, about the Munich
+theologians in secret consistory, and about the so-called
+Liberal or <q>half-Catholics</q> on every occasion; the
+latter by their growing impatience about the infallibility
+definition, and their assurances that there is no
+real opposition to this dogma, and that, if there was,
+it could not hold its ground after the promulgation had
+taken place. And so the opponents of the decree must
+know at last that they have to deal with a blind and
+unscrupulous zeal, not with a theological system carefully
+thought out and placed on an intellectual basis;
+that the contest has to be carried on against the whole
+power and influence of the Pope, and not, as had been
+maintained with transparent hypocrisy, only against
+the wishes of the noisy and independent party of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> and its allied journalists. They begin to use
+more earnest and manlier language, the language of
+clear apprehension and conscientious conviction. If the
+comments handed in last week on the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi>,
+and the protests against any hurrying of the discussion
+<pb n='381'/><anchor id='Pg381'/>
+on it, were known to the world, the Catholic Episcopate
+and the strong reflux current here would appear in a
+very different light from what might be gathered from
+the previous course of things. Not a few of these
+opinions drawn up by the Bishops breathe a truly
+apostolic spirit, and deal with the Roman proposals in
+the tone of genuine theology. An influential theologian
+of a Religious Order has pronounced of one of them,
+that it exceeds in force and weight the treatise which
+appeared in Germany last year, <hi rend='italic'>Reform of the Church
+in Her Head and Her Members</hi>.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Reform der Kirche an Haupt und Gliedern.</hi></note> It has been urged by
+English prelates that it concerns their honour to resist
+the promulgation of a dogma, the explicit repudiation
+of which by the Irish Bishops was an efficacious condition
+of Catholic Emancipation. The American Protest
+contains a more threatening warning than the
+German, and the German is stronger than the French.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After these declarations the attitude of the minority
+was clearly defined, and invincible by any foe from
+without. Their contention is, that no right exists in
+the Church to sanction a dogma against the will and
+belief of an important portion of the Episcopate, and
+that only by abandoning any claim to such a right can
+<pb n='382'/><anchor id='Pg382'/>
+the Council be regarded as really Œcumenical. To
+be quite consistent, the minority ought to take
+no further part in the Council till this point, on the
+decision of which they rightly hold its authority
+to depend, is settled; for their protest implied the
+doubt whether they were taking part in a true or only
+a seeming Council, whether they were acting in union
+with the Holy Ghost or co-operating to carry out a
+gigantic and sacrilegious deception. Yet the words
+expressly stating this doubt, and making the distinct
+withdrawal of the theory of voting dogmas by majorities
+a condition of any further participation in the proceedings,
+were not adopted into any of the Protests.
+This implied that the signataries would appear in the
+next General Congregation, that they refrained from a
+suspicious attitude, and were unwilling to interpret the
+ambiguous order of business <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in malam partem</foreign>, until
+facts compelled them to do so. A conflict which might
+have such incalculable results was to be avoided, till
+necessity made it a positive duty; and that was not
+the case as long as a favourable interpretation of the
+<foreign rend='italic'>regolamento</foreign> continued possible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus the minority committed the strategical blunder
+of postponing a conflict which they saw to be inevitable,
+<pb n='383'/><anchor id='Pg383'/>
+and when they could not know whether any more
+favourable opportunity for entering on it for the benefit
+of the Church would occur in the future. There is
+hardly anything doubtful or open to double interpretation
+in the order of business, when more closely
+examined. Every Bishop sees quite clearly that it is
+specially arranged for overcoming the opposition of the
+minority, and will be used without scruple for that end.<note place='foot'>[The correctness of this prediction was conspicuously illustrated in the
+<foreign rend='italic'>coup</foreign> of June 3. <hi rend='italic'>Cf. infr.</hi> Letter <ref target='Letter_LII'>lii</ref>.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+And who knows how many members of the present
+Opposition, if once the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> applies its last lever, will
+have strength to resist to extremities? how many are
+ready, by humble submission or by resigning their Sees,
+to quiet their consciences and sacrifice their flocks to
+error? There are men among them better fitted for the
+contest against the principle formally enounced in the
+revised order of business, than for the contest against
+infallibility. The Bishop of Mayence, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, passes for
+one of the strongest and most decided opponents of the
+<foreign rend='italic'>regolamento</foreign>, which I mention as a point of great importance
+at this moment. The resolve of the protesting
+Bishops, to avoid the threatened conflict at present, can
+only be justified if another and better opportunity for
+<pb n='384'/><anchor id='Pg384'/>
+defending the cause of the Church occurs in the future
+course of the Council and before any decision is arrived
+at. Had they been willing, after handing in their protests,
+to go on quietly joining in the proceedings, without
+doing anything to give emphasis to the step they
+had taken, they would in fact have bent under the yoke
+of the majority. They only needed to keep silent:
+that implied everything. For it would necessarily be
+assumed that they had withdrawn or forgotten their
+protests, and to continue to act upon and submit to the
+new order of business themselves would imply that they
+had renounced their resistance to any of its particular
+details. It was therefore all the more essential for
+them to let it be clearly known how far their concessions
+would extend, and what was their final limit.
+Unless they did this, they would either seem not quite
+sincere, or would have really accepted the <foreign rend='italic'>regolamento</foreign>
+with its obvious consequences. The Council, the Presidents,
+the Pope, the expectant Catholic world without,
+had a right to know their real intentions, and
+whether they meant to adhere to their declarations. The
+first voting on the propositions of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi>
+could not fail to decide this point. Thus it became
+a necessity to put this question of principle in the
+<pb n='385'/><anchor id='Pg385'/>
+front at the reopening of the deliberations of the
+Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the concessions of the Presidents and the
+majority on some points had elicited a more friendly
+feeling in the Opposition. The discussion on infallibility
+was postponed, and the first <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> was returned
+from the Commission with important modifications.
+Even the shameful treatment of Montalembert could
+not altogether destroy this conciliatory state of feeling.
+Ginoulhiac, the learned Bishop of Grenoble, who was to
+be preconised as Archbishop of Lyons on Monday the
+21st, undertook on the 22d to meet the discreet concessions
+of the infallibilists in a kindred spirit. He
+was indeed obliged to make his speech on the Tuesday,
+though he had not been preconised on the day before.
+The French, who have no Cardinal&mdash;for Mathieu's custom
+is to go away at any critical moment, and he was not
+then returned&mdash;had gladly left to one of the Austrian
+Cardinals the less pleasing duty of declaring their attitude
+towards the <foreign rend='italic'>regolamento</foreign>. Schwarzenberg did but
+slightly glance at it in his speech and yet was called
+to order. Archbishop Kenrick of St. Louis, one of the
+most imposing figures in the Council, touched on the
+theme more closely, and dwelt on the office of Bishops
+<pb n='386'/><anchor id='Pg386'/>
+as witnesses and judges of faith, in the sense which
+forms the basis of the opposition of the minority.
+Lastly, Strossmayer ascended the tribune, and then
+followed a scene which, for dramatic force and theological
+significance, almost exceeded anything in the
+past history of Councils. He began by referring to
+that passage at the opening of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, where
+Protestantism is made responsible for modern unbelief&mdash;<q>systematum
+monstra, mythismi, rationalismi, indifferentismi
+nomine designata.</q> He blamed the
+perversity and injustice of these words, referring to
+the religious indifference among Catholics which preceded
+the Reformation, and the horrors of the Revolution,
+which were caused by godlessness among
+Catholics, not among Protestants. He added that the
+able champions of Christian doctrine among the Protestants
+ought not to be forgotten, to many of whom
+St. Augustine's words applied, <q>errant, sed bonâ fide
+errant;</q> Catholics had produced no better refutations
+of the errors enumerated in the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> than had been
+written by Protestants, and all Christians were indebted
+to such men as Leibnitz and Guizot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each one of these statements, and the two names, were
+received with loud murmurs, which at last broke out into
+<pb n='387'/><anchor id='Pg387'/>
+a storm of indignation. The President, De Angelis, cried
+out, <q>Hicce non est locus laudandi Protestantes.</q> And
+he was right, for the Palace of the Inquisition is hardly
+a hundred paces from the place where he was speaking.
+Strossmayer exclaimed, in the midst of a great uproar,
+<q>That alone can be imposed on the faithful as a dogma,
+which has a moral unanimity of the Bishops of the
+Church in its favour.</q> At these words a frightful
+tumult arose. Several Bishops sprang from their seats,
+rushed to the tribune, and shook their fists in the
+speaker's face. Place, Bishop of Marseilles, one of the
+boldest of the minority and the first to give in his
+public adhesion to Dupanloup's Pastoral, cried out,
+<q>Ego illum non damno.</q> Thereupon a shout resounded
+from all sides, <q>Omnes, omnes illum damnamus.</q> The
+President called Strossmayer to order, but he did not
+leave the tribune till he had solemnly protested against
+the violence to which he had been subjected. There
+was hardly less excitement in the church outside than
+in the Council Hall. Some thought the Garibaldians
+had broken in: others, with more presence of mind,
+thought infallibility had been proclaimed, and these
+last began shouting <q>Long live the infallible Pope!</q>
+A Bishop of the United States said afterwards, not
+<pb n='388'/><anchor id='Pg388'/>
+without a sense of patriotic pride, that he knew now
+of one assembly still rougher than the Congress of his
+own country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This memorable day has already become the subject
+of myths, and so it is no longer possible to define with
+certainty how many prelates were hurried into these
+passionate outbreaks. Some speak of 400, some of
+200; others again say that the majority disapproved of
+the interruption. The excitement was followed next
+day by a profound stillness, which was not broken even
+when Haynald and the North American Bishop Whelan
+said very strong things. It seemed as if a sense of
+what they owed to the dignity of the Council and a
+feeling of shame had got the better of those turbulent
+spirits. But enough has occurred to show the world
+what spirit prevails here, and what sort of men they
+are who support infallibilism. That up to this time
+this Council does not deserve the respect of the Catholic
+world, is the least point; it is of more importance,
+that an internal split in the Church is more and more
+revealing itself. Henceforth it will no longer be possible
+to throw in the teeth of genuine Catholics their
+compromising or dishonourable solidarity with error
+and lies, for this has given place to an open and avowed
+<pb n='389'/><anchor id='Pg389'/>
+opposition. On one side stands the small but morally
+powerful band of those who accept Strossmayer's noble
+words with head and heart, on the other a crowd of
+<q>abject</q><note place='foot'>This word (<foreign lang='de' rend='italic'>niederträchtigen</foreign>) was lately used by a German Bishop.</note> fanatics and sycophants. This division is of
+supreme significance for the future course of the Council,
+because it strengthens and consolidates the minority
+in their harmony and determination, and obliges them
+to take a further step, as soon as the majority have made
+it unmistakably clear that they will not acknowledge and
+respect their claim to prevent a dogmatic definition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Presidents, by denouncing Strossmayer's speech
+but not the interruption of it, as it was their duty to do,
+gave evidence of an undisguised partiality, and justly incurred
+the suspicion of sympathizing with the shouters
+and not with the speaker, and thinking the proclamation
+of infallibility allowable without the moral unanimity
+of the Council. Accordingly a categorical
+demand was sent in to them to declare themselves on
+this point, and, in case of their giving no answer,
+another last step is reserved, which will have the
+nature of an ultimatum and will bring the Œcumenicity
+of the Vatican Council to a decisive test. And so
+it may be said that the Bishops of the minority have
+<pb n='390'/><anchor id='Pg390'/>
+delayed but not wavered. The moment for a decisive
+move, which may test the existence of the Council,
+must come when a dogmatic decree has to be voted on.
+This crisis seemed to have arrived on Saturday, March
+26, when the preamble of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi> was to
+have been voted on. Various amendments had been
+proposed, one very important one by Bishop Meignan of
+Chalons, in which the Fathers were designated as definers
+of the decrees, and another equally important,
+implicitly containing infallibility, by Dreux-Brézé,
+Bishop of Moulins. Moreover this preamble contained
+the obnoxious passages immortalized by the glowing
+eloquence of Strossmayer. The antagonistic principles
+seemed to have reached their ultimate point. Votes
+were to be taken on dogmatic decrees before any agreement
+had been come to on the necessary conditions of
+such voting. At the last moment the Presidents resolved
+to evade the crisis. The very day before the
+sitting, Friday, March 25, Cardinal Bilio went to the
+authors of the amendments and persuaded them to withdraw
+them, and so on Saturday the text of the preamble
+was brought forward without any amendment. Nor
+was there any voting on that either, but they passed at
+once to the discussion on the first chapter of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>,
+<pb n='391'/><anchor id='Pg391'/>
+in which the Primate of Hungary (Simor) made an
+adroit and conciliatory speech as advocate of the Commission
+on Faith. The debate then proceeded. By
+the eleventh article of the new order of business, every
+separate part of a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> must be voted on before the
+next can come on for discussion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a breach of this rule to pass on straight to the
+first chapter of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, without having voted on the
+preamble. The Bishops asked themselves what this
+meant. Was it intended, by the withdrawal of the
+amendments and the abandonment of the discussion, to
+declare the preamble tacitly accepted? Was it intended
+to correct that objectionable passage? But the
+wording of the <foreign rend='italic'>regolamento</foreign> was too strict to allow of
+that being done except in the General Congregation.
+It seemed at any rate as if more prudent counsels had
+prevailed and it was intended to avert the dreaded contest
+on the main principle by concessions, so as to pass
+such decrees as were possible, that they may be unanimously
+promulgated in the Easter session. Thus time
+would be gained for loosening the compact phalanx of
+the Opposition, and at the same time getting it more
+deeply implicated in a compromising actual acceptance
+of the new order of business, in its form as well as its
+<pb n='392'/><anchor id='Pg392'/>
+spirit. This double danger is always imminent, but in
+fact the Opposition as yet has suffered no loss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We are at the end of the fourth month of the Council,
+and yet they have not dared to put one decree to
+the vote. The amendments, which were so obnoxious,
+have disappeared. The passage about unbelief being
+the offspring of Protestantism, which Strossmayer
+assailed, will perhaps be corrected, though in an irregular
+manner. The simple and sanguine spirits among the
+Opposition Bishops exult over a victory obtained. One
+of the most famous of them exclaimed, <q>It is clear the
+Holy Ghost is guiding the Council.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='393'/><anchor id='Pg393'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Thirty-Third Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, March 30, 1870.</hi>&mdash;Yesterday (the 29th) the
+first voting in Council took place, on the preamble of
+the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi>. As I told you in my last letter,
+this preamble had been objected to by Strossmayer on
+account of the passage representing rationalism, indifferentism,
+the mythical theory of the Bible and unbelief
+as consequences of Protestantism. Several amendments
+had been proposed; two of them I have mentioned
+already, one introduced by Bishop Meignan of Chalons,
+substituting for a mere approbation of the decree a
+statement expressly guarding the right of the Episcopate
+to define,&mdash;the other, proposed by Dreux-Brézé,
+designed to smuggle in the infallibilist doctrine in a
+form requiring a sharpsighted eye to detect it.<note place='foot'>The original text ran: <q>Quâ sane benignitate ipsius ac providentiâ
+factum est, ut ex Œcumenicis omnibus Concíliis, et ex Tridentino nominatim
+amplissima in universam Catholicam Familiam utilitas dimanaverit;</q>
+the amendment of Dreux-Brézé runs: <q>Quâ sane benignitate ipsius ac providentiâ factum est, ut <emph>licet omnibus Ecclesiae necessitatibus per ordinarium
+Summi Pontificis regimen et magisterium satis fuerit provisum</emph>, tamen ex
+Œcumenicis omnibus Conciliis,</q> etc.</note> Many
+<pb n='394'/><anchor id='Pg394'/>
+infallibilists had reckoned on the victory of their
+dogma last week by means of this amendment. The
+Presidents had got some of the amendments withdrawn
+on Friday, the 25th, but these two they suffered to remain.
+They were equally sure that the first would be rejected
+and the second accepted by the majority; nay they
+counted on a far larger majority for the passage implying
+infallibility than for the rejection of Meignan's proposal,
+and hoped that this occasion would tend to
+bring to light unmistakably the power and extent of
+the infallibilist party.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the beginning of the sitting of Saturday, the 26th,
+the exact regulations for the method of voting were first
+read out, and this was repeated a second time to preclude
+any risk of misapprehension. Yet it was announced
+immediately afterwards that there would be
+no voting, and this unexpected change was made during
+the Session and in presence of the Fathers. There had
+in fact been a kind of fermentation going on since
+Tuesday, the 22nd, when Strossmayer's affair occurred.
+The justice of his criticism on the passage about Protestantism
+<pb n='395'/><anchor id='Pg395'/>
+and unbelief had become evident to many;
+at least fifteen Bishops made representations to the President
+about it as late as the Friday. According to a very
+widely-spread report, one of them was the Bishop of
+Orleans and the other the Bishop of Augsburg. But in
+spite of this, and of the prospect of a catastrophe, which
+the union of the Germans made imminent, they seem to
+have gone into Saturday's sitting firmly resolved not to
+yield. Yet a last attempt succeeded. After the mass,
+when all were assembled, a Bishop handed in a paper
+with a few lines to the Presidents, on which two of
+them at once left the Hall. Meanwhile the order of
+the day and the method of voting was read out. On
+their return the decision was announced; the preamble
+was withdrawn to be amended. It was an English
+Bishop whose paper produced such important results.<note place='foot'>[It is understood to have been Bishop Clifford of Clifton.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Monday, the 28th, the preamble was distributed
+in its revised form; Dreux-Brézé's objectionable amendment
+had disappeared, the passage about Protestantism
+was altered, and even the style was improved. Primate
+Simor, speaking in the name of the Commission, had
+already stated officially that the Bishops were at liberty
+to subscribe the decrees by <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>definiens subscripsi</foreign>, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, to use
+<pb n='396'/><anchor id='Pg396'/>
+the ancient conciliar formula by which the Bishops used
+to describe themselves as defining the decrees. And
+thus the principle for which Meignan, Strossmayer, and
+Whelan had contended, was conceded. In this form
+and after these concessions the preamble could no longer
+be opposed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The strength of the minority has been proved, though
+in an irregular manner. But obviously this gives an
+opening to the majority for similarly setting aside the
+order of business when it is inconvenient for themselves.
+Beyond a doubt the spirit of conciliation has triumphed
+over all opposition at the critical moment. And it may
+be distinctly said that this result was attained, partly
+through the firm attitude of the minority, partly through
+the prudent and abundantly justified yielding of the Presidents.
+By this discreet procedure they have declined all
+responsibility for the conduct of those who, on Tuesday
+the 22d, would hear of no objections to that portion of
+the preamble. And their doing this so decidedly makes
+their silence on the other matter, which caused such an
+outbreak, the more surprising, and some explanation of
+it is all the more necessary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The amended preamble was then accepted unanimously.
+But the chapter <hi rend='italic'>De Deo Creatore</hi> did not pass
+<pb n='397'/><anchor id='Pg397'/>
+so easily, though it might have been expected that, at
+the end of four months, the Bishops would have arrived
+at some agreement on that point. The main difficulty
+arose from the tendency again to smuggle in statements
+favourable to infallibility, and paving the way for its
+definition by a sidewind. The first paragraph, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>,
+opens thus, <q>Sancta Romana Catholica Ecclesia credit et
+confitetur unum esse Deum verum et vivum, Creatorem
+cœli et terræ.</q> Two amendments were proposed on
+this: (1.) <q>Proponitur, ut initio capitis primi simpliciter
+dicatur, <q>Sancta Catholica Ecclesia credit et confitetur,</q></q>
+etc. (2.) <q>Proponitur, ut in capite primo verba <q>Romana
+Catholica Ecclesia</q> transferantur, ita ut legatur
+<q>Catholica atque Romana Ecclesia.</q> Sin autem non
+placuerit Patribus, ut saltem comma interponatur inter
+verba <emph>Romana</emph> et <emph>Catholica</emph>.</q> There was a great deal of
+discussion about this word <q>Romana.</q> The German
+Opposition Bishops exhibit a better organization than
+the French. In spite of the great majority, it was announced
+that the voting would be only provisional, a
+<q>suffragatio provisoria,</q> and it is probable that the
+first chapter will be revised in this point, as in several
+others, before being presented for definitive acceptance.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='398'/><anchor id='Pg398'/>
+
+<p>
+It is very noteworthy that the Italian Government
+has made no attempt to utilize the new complications,
+and the introduction of a new system of policy in
+France very hostile in principle to Roman absolutism.
+The Roman question has gone to sleep at the moment
+when a solution seemed to be in view. Indifference
+has taken the place of zeal at the very time when zeal
+had a prospect of success. Nowhere is the reason of
+this seeming apathy better understood than at Rome.
+The Italians are patient, because they see the settlement
+approaching in the natural course of things and
+without violence: they know that with the death of
+Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> a far-reaching change must ensue. His successor
+will enter on the difficult inheritance under
+very different conditions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The change of sovereigns will, in another point of
+view, be a very critical transition for the system dominant
+here. There is no point the non-Italian Episcopate
+with the foreign Cardinals and the Great Powers,
+are so united upon as throwing open the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and
+the Sacred College to foreigners. A Papal election
+under present circumstances might be very dangerous
+for the centralization policy. The hardly-won domination
+of that party which Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> has made into his
+<pb n='399'/><anchor id='Pg399'/>
+instrument would be menaced, for after a long pontificate
+an election is always a reaction and not a continuation.
+The numerous elements of opposition, which
+have so long been suppressed, combine then for mutual
+aid. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> has created the College of Cardinals
+himself, but his successor will be the creation of the
+College. The ruling party runs the risk of getting a
+Pope who will no longer serve it and carry on its
+policy, and it is certain that the next Pope will be
+much weaker than the present one in his relations
+with the Governments, the Cardinals and the Episcopate.
+Much, very much, of the present resources of
+the Papacy depends on the person of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>, and will
+be buried with him. It is the interest of all who are
+concerned in the continuance of the existing system,
+that his personal influence should survive his reign.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He alone can hand on to his successor his own
+special connection with France, and he alone can secure
+the choice of a successor in the Jesuit interest. But,
+to accomplish that, he must survive his own pontificate,
+must himself fix on the desired successor, must himself
+inaugurate him and support him with the whole weight
+of his personal influence. And thus the bold and ingenious
+device has been started of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> abdicating,
+<pb n='400'/><anchor id='Pg400'/>
+and a new election being held during his life. It is said
+not to be quite a new project; in the honeymoon of the
+Council, just after the New Year, it first began to be
+somewhat inconsiderately spoken of. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> is nearly
+eighty, two years older than is generally said. He was
+elected June 16, 1846, and will therefore, on June 16,
+1870, complete the twenty-fourth year of his pontificate.
+But there is an old saying, universally believed in
+Rome, that no Pope will reign twenty-five years, as it
+was the exclusive privilege of St. Peter to be Pope for
+a quarter of a century. <q>Non numerabis annos Petri.</q>
+It is a fact that none of the 255 predecessors of the
+present Pope has held office for twenty-five years; even
+those elected at thirty-seven, like Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> and
+Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi>, died earlier. So according to this belief, which
+is not confined to the vulgar, Pius has only one year
+more to live. But in spite of his age he is healthy and
+wonderfully strong, and, as he belongs to a long-lived
+family, he has the prospect of still living some time,
+only not as reigning Pope. It is no pleasing prospect
+for a man, in whose character there is a large element
+of <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>amour propre</foreign>, to be treated as the setting sun,
+while all are speculating on his speedy death. It
+would be another thing, at the very moment of his
+<pb n='401'/><anchor id='Pg401'/>
+glorious triumph over the Council and after gaining
+infallibility, to resign it, to decline to enjoy his success,
+to renounce this mighty power in the first moment of
+fruition, and to transfer the splendid inheritance to
+the hands of a younger man. Thus next June might
+witness the most brilliant jubilee, and an example be
+given of such imposing grandeur that the world has
+seen nothing like it, of such wisdom and eventful
+significance that the present system would be immortalized
+and become the heirloom of the Papacy for all
+ages. The Pope would retire into a glorious privacy,
+like the founder of the North American Republic after
+his second Presidentship, and taste the honours of an ex-Pope,
+unequalled by any former ceremonial splendour,
+and close his days in a position of unprecedented elevation.
+This seductive dream has found little aliment
+in the course of the Council hitherto. The plan
+would be at bottom a conspiracy against existing law,
+against Cardinals, Governments, and the Episcopate,
+and notwithstanding its dazzling lustre, would make
+the very worst impression on the Council. A victorious
+Pope might conceivably attempt to carry it out,
+but in the present situation it would be a dangerous
+challenge.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='402'/><anchor id='Pg402'/>
+
+<p>
+The abdication of a Pope is not without precedent
+in history. In 1294 a Pope took this step, which has
+never since been repeated; Celestine <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> resigned the
+papal office, to which he felt himself unequal. After a
+long and quarrelsome Conclave, the Cardinals, at their
+wits' end, had elected the pious recluse of Einsiedlen, and
+dragged him from his mountain home; a few months
+later they got tired of him and urged him to abdicate,
+and he complied. Many doubted whether a Pope
+could resign; they thought that, according to the law
+established by the Popes themselves in the decretals,
+no Pope could dissolve of his own power the bond
+which unites him to the Church and the Church to
+him. It would require a superior in the hierarchy to
+do this, and none such exists. It had first therefore to
+be decided that a Pope could resign, and Celestine
+settled this by a special Bull. After that he solemnly
+and publicly laid down his office. Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi> succeeded,
+who shut up the unfortunate man in a mountain
+fastness, where he died soon afterwards in a damp
+unhealthy dungeon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the strictly initiated circles, where the above project
+is most definitely spoken of, the man selected by
+Pius for his successor is also known; it is Cardinal
+<pb n='403'/><anchor id='Pg403'/>
+Bilio, aged forty-four, who possesses the confidence
+equally of the Pope and the Jesuits. He edited the
+Syllabus, and assisted the Jesuits in drawing up the
+first <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>; in short, Pius would have the satisfaction
+of reckoning securely on his carrying on the present
+system for many years. Of course, even if the seventeen
+or eighteen vacant Cardinals' Hats were given to
+men pledged to this scheme, it would still remain a
+question whether Pius could succeed in still controlling
+the Conclave after his abdication. Many think that
+the Cardinals would then, as has so often happened,
+elect a very aged man, and Cardinal de Angelis is
+named as the likeliest to be chosen.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='404'/><anchor id='Pg404'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Thirty-Fourth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 10, 1870.</hi>&mdash;When it became known that
+the Solemn Session for accepting and proclaiming the
+first dogmatic decrees was to be held, not on the 11th
+April as first intended, but on the 24th, the question of
+how this interval should be used came to the front.
+For the moment general attention is directed towards
+Paris. The answer of Cardinal Antonelli, drawn up by
+Franchi, Archbishop of Thessalonica <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign> and one
+of the most active curialists in the affairs of the Council,
+arrived there March 24. According to the account of
+a French statesman, it produced the impression of being
+intended for a mediæval king, who could neither read
+nor write. The two main points in it are&mdash;(1.) that the
+<foreign rend='italic'>Canones de Ecclesiâ</foreign> contain no new claims and do not
+affect States which have a Concordat at all, and (2.)
+that no ambassador can be admitted to the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French Government oscillated a long time between
+<pb n='405'/><anchor id='Pg405'/>
+the counsels of different advisers. The Bishop
+of Nevers represented the middle party, at whose head
+stands Cardinal Bonnechose; the Bishop of Constantine
+and afterwards the Bishop of Coutances might, as members
+of the Opposition, have come to a similar opinion.
+At first the plan found favour of not sending any
+special ambassador to the Council, but accrediting the
+ambassador to the Pope for the Council also. France
+would thereby have gained the start of Prussia, for it
+was hardly to be supposed that a Protestant diplomatist
+would claim the right of entering the Council.
+So much more important became the question, whether
+the Marquis de Banneville, who had meanwhile gone
+to Paris to justify his policy of inaction, would be
+superseded, or sent back to Rome in this double capacity,
+and therefore with increased powers. The latter
+course would be a significant concession to the inflexible
+Pope, a decided gain for the majority, and therefore a
+sensible blow for the Opposition. It would be a practical
+proof that Rome had only to resist, in order to
+intimidate France, and that the Imperial Government
+renounced all further interference with the Council.
+That was so obvious that a host of candidates for this
+weighty and honourable office were proposed to the
+<pb n='406'/><anchor id='Pg406'/>
+minister. Baroche is said to have wished for it;
+Cornudet, a friend of Montalembert's, was much talked
+of, as well as Corcelles and Latour d'Auvergne, two
+men who seemed particularly well fitted to make the
+change of persons more acceptable at Rome. For some
+time the Duke of Broglie had the best prospect of it,
+who stands high among the Catholic laity as a political
+historian and student of Church history and the Fathers,
+but as a Liberal Catholic he belongs to the party the
+Pope hates above all others just now. To appoint him
+would have been at once to identify the French Government
+with the minority, and might, instead of conciliating,
+have led to results most abhorrent to the
+amiable and pious character of the Duke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was also a prevalent opinion that qualifications
+should be first attended to, and the best head among
+French statesmen be intrusted with this important
+mission&mdash;that men should be chosen like Rouher or
+Thiers, who had done service to the temporal power,
+but who stood quite aloof from the internal feuds of
+parties. To accredit them would make the withdrawal
+of the Romanizing Banneville less surprising and less
+irritating to the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. The Bishops of the middle
+party wanted the place for one of themselves. But
+<pb n='407'/><anchor id='Pg407'/>
+they are not a body in much favour at Paris, and it was
+intimated to them that the best qualified prelates are
+not to be found in their ranks. Their representative,
+the Bishop of Nevers, came back in a state of irritation
+from Paris, where he is said to have found only three
+adherents of papal infallibility, two of whom were
+women. It is conjectured that the third was the
+Nuncio Chigi, who has affirmed that all Paris will
+illuminate the day the dogma is proclaimed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The proposal for a Conference emerged again in the
+French Cabinet, but was rejected as inappropriate, for
+it would necessarily betray the weakness of a disunited
+ministry. At last the plan was adopted of sending a
+preliminary answer to Antonelli's letter, and waiting
+for the result of this before fixing on an ambassador.
+And so it was resolved at the beginning of April to
+draw up a note, which might at the same time be laid
+before the other powers, and serve as the basis for
+common action. It was communicated to the various
+Governments during last week, and is said to have
+been brought to Rome to-day by the Marquis de
+Banneville. But the Empress had meanwhile sent to
+Rome to get a more definite and authentic report of
+the views of the Bishops. But the answer did not
+<pb n='408'/><anchor id='Pg408'/>
+reach Paris till after the note had been drawn up and
+despatched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The only answer the minority needed to give was to
+communicate to the Government the various memorials
+they had presented to the Council, for these documents
+indicate the only policy which can be pursued with
+success, and which must be pursued. They deal not
+only with purely theological questions, but with the
+management of the Council, with questions of freedom
+and right which concern the lay world as much as the
+clergy. It is in the nature of things that the Governments
+should follow the lead of the Opposition, for to
+fall short of this would be to sacrifice their Bishops, while
+to go beyond it would be unjustifiable and dangerous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It has now been again declared on the part of the
+minority, that their freedom is encroached upon by the
+order of business and the way the Presidents conduct
+affairs. The changes they asked for were not made,
+and their protests remained unanswered. In the
+opinion of many Bishops the legitimate freedom of
+the Council no longer exists, and over a hundred have
+said plainly that it would not be regarded as Œcumenical,
+if the question of making dogmatic definitions
+on faith and morals against the will of the minority is left
+<pb n='409'/><anchor id='Pg409'/>
+doubtful. And this doubt, so far from being removed,
+has been changed into certainty at Rome. The Presidents
+passed over the demand of the Opposition in silence,
+although it threatened and called in question the very
+existence of the Council; they did not protect Strossmayer
+against the rude interruption which followed on
+his asserting the necessity for unanimity, but rather
+sided with it. The official press has openly attacked
+this view of the minority. Antonelli maintains the
+right of the Pope to make into a dogma the precise
+contrary of what the Council has unanimously accepted.
+According, therefore, to the well-known declarations
+already made by the minority, the Council has lost the
+character of Œcumenicity, and the See of Rome has
+abandoned the ground of Catholicism.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The various States must direct their attention to
+these points within these limits. They may pronounce
+in favour of the prorogation or reformation of
+the Council, but they cannot recognise it under its
+present conditions on any strictly Catholic principles.
+But to desire reforms now, after the experience of four
+months, during which the dominant spirit has manifested
+itself with such unscrupulous audacity, and after the
+determination to force through the infallibilist system in
+<pb n='410'/><anchor id='Pg410'/>
+doctrine and practice in its crudest form by deceit and
+violence has become unmistakably clear, would betray
+a rare simplicity. The whole thing is settled by the
+question about majorities; and on that point, after what
+has passed, Rome can hardly yield now without giving
+up her claims altogether. An infallibility, which is
+subject to the veto of the minority of Bishops, ceases to
+be infallibility; the condition of moral unanimity in
+the Episcopate excludes it. And so the Council could
+not be saved without involving the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> in a contradiction.
+A Council dominated by a Pope who holds
+himself infallible is <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>a priori</foreign> a nonentity. The Governments
+can only help it by securing it a speedy
+euthanasia. If they wished to act worthily and sincerely
+and in accordance with the gravity of the situation,
+they would have to declare, in union with the
+most influential Bishops, that the arbitrary and crooked
+way of managing the Council makes the establishment
+of any important decrees impossible; that the Vatican
+Council has lost all moral authority in the eyes of the
+world, and that the best thing would be to put an end
+to it with the least sacrifice of its dignity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Governments might use such language, but only
+after an open breach between the minority and the
+<pb n='411'/><anchor id='Pg411'/>
+Presidents. The minority must have spoken their last
+word, and they have not done so yet. The interest of
+the Catholic Church requires that the Bishops should
+have the necessary time for forming and carrying out
+their resolutions, and that the crisis should not be precipitated
+by a catastrophe. The Council can do no good by
+the decrees fathered on it, but it has already done much
+good by the declarations of different sections of its
+members, by the speeches of individual Bishops, and
+the spirit manifested by a portion of them, and it will
+do much more very shortly. More than once have
+words been spoken there which have fired millions of
+hearts, have strengthened the bond of love and unity
+among Christians, and have openly indicated the real
+defects and the real remedies required for them. This
+seed of a better future in the Catholic Church will not
+be lost, but will bring forth abundant fruit. In each
+successive utterance genuine Catholic principles have
+come out more and more clearly, as the progress of the
+combat has forced them on the minority. The false
+problems, only hypocritically pre-arranged to be laid
+before the Council, disappear more and more. It
+becomes more and more clearly ascertained and acknowledged,
+that the contest is one of first principles, for the
+<pb n='412'/><anchor id='Pg412'/>
+maintenance of divine truths and institutions against
+arbitrary violence and impudent deceit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+New declarations on the rights of the State and the
+conditions of a really Œcumenical Council, directly condemning
+the new Roman system of the Syllabus and Infallibilism,
+may perhaps appear in a few days. While
+in the highest degree critical and threatening for the
+Council, they might form the basis of sounder developments
+for the future. If particular States are to bring
+the matter to a decisive issue, it seems desirable that
+the Bishops should come forward with their resolutions
+designed to promote this end.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='413'/><anchor id='Pg413'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Thirty-Fifth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 12, 1870.</hi>&mdash;Veuillot says, in the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>
+of April 2, that there are three great <q>devotions</q> in
+Rome, the Holy Sacrament, the holy Virgin, and the
+Pope. For the moment, and in regard to the Council
+and all that concerns the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, the devotion to the
+Pope is of course the chief affair. How that devotion
+may best be erected into the supreme law of religious
+thought and feeling&mdash;how to effect that henceforth, in all
+questions of the spiritual life, every one shall turn only
+to Rome and take his orders and look for certainty from
+thence alone&mdash;this is the task the Council has to achieve;
+all else is subordinate, or is merely the means to an end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next to the Jesuits Veuillot is unquestionably the
+man to whom infallibilism is chiefly indebted; and
+when it is made a dogma, a grateful posterity must
+give honourable place to his name among the promulgators
+of the new article of faith. He is much too
+<pb n='414'/><anchor id='Pg414'/>
+modest, when he says his rôle in the Church is only
+that of the door-keeper who drives out the dogs during
+divine service. Veuillot is much more to his readers
+than any Father of the Church. Continual dropping
+hollows out the stone, and for years past Veuillot has
+been familiarizing his readers, in numberless articles
+where the copious verbiage concealed the poverty of
+thought, with the notion that papal infallibility is the
+first and greatest of all truths. His journal is read
+even in Rome in the highest circles, and read by those
+who read nothing else, except perhaps Margotti's <hi rend='italic'>Unità
+Cattolica</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi> is very successful in the business of
+stirring up the inferior clergy against their bishops in
+the dioceses of Opposition prelates, and getting them
+to present addresses in favour of infallibilism. In the
+number of April 2, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, they are directed to get their
+petitions for the new dogma sent here through the Paris
+nunciature, and to take particular care that they are
+printed&mdash;<q>de plus, il importe de les publier.</q> The
+<hi rend='italic'>Monde</hi> has invented a peculiar means of advancing the
+good cause. It announces that the Freemasons are the
+people who disseminate writings against papal infallibility,
+and then intimates to the Italian Bishops the
+<pb n='415'/><anchor id='Pg415'/>
+important fact that the minority of the Council are
+affiliated to Masonic Lodges.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <hi rend='italic'>Unità Cattolica</hi>, the organ of Margotti, the
+Italian Veuillot, has 15,000 subscribers and 100,000
+readers, and has more influence than all the 256 Italian
+Bishops put together. Their pastorals are powerless as
+compared with this daily paper, and they themselves
+are divided between their fear of the powerful Margotti
+and their regard for the judgment of the educated
+classes. But as most of these last are indifferentists,
+and give no moral support to a Bishop, the journalists
+carry the day, who treat every opponent of the pet
+Roman dogma as Veuillot does.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An Anglican clergyman named Edward Husband,
+who not long since became a Catholic, has again left
+the Church, because the dispute about papal infallibility
+and the extravagant <foreign rend='italic'>cultus</foreign> of Mary were too great
+scandals for him. It is only to the exasperation caused
+by proceedings at Rome, as an English statesman has
+written word, that we owe the passing in the House of
+Commons by a majority of two of a Bill for the civil
+inspection of Convents, which had always previously
+been rejected. The minority had done their best to avert
+it, but were overruled, and Newdegate&mdash;a person who
+<pb n='416'/><anchor id='Pg416'/>
+was hitherto almost regarded as a joke&mdash;triumphed.
+All reports from England confirm the belief that this is
+only one symptom of the hostile state of feeling rapidly
+spreading there. Among English statesmen there is
+not one, within the memory of man, who has shown
+such sympathy for Catholics and their Church as Gladstone,
+as neither have any had so extensive a knowledge
+of theological and ecclesiastical questions. Yet he too
+took occasion, during the debate of April 1 on the Irish
+Education question in the Commons, to speak his mind
+on the tendencies of the Roman Jesuit party. After
+quoting an unfavourable comment of his former colleague,
+Sir George Grey, on the demands of the Irish
+Bishops, he proceeded to say, with raised voice and in
+most emphatic tones, amid the <q>loud cheers</q> of the
+House, that <q>events have occurred and are occurring,
+in a great religious centre of Europe, of such a character
+that it is impossible for a statesman to feel himself in
+nearer proximity with the opinions of the Roman
+Catholic Hierarchy than he stood four years ago.</q><note place='foot'>See <hi rend='italic'>Times</hi> for April 2, 1870.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have already pointed out that, as soon as the new
+articles of faith are defined, their effects will be manifested
+in the education question throughout pretty well
+<pb n='417'/><anchor id='Pg417'/>
+the whole of Europe. This enrichment of the creed will
+at once be repaid with losses and humiliations of the
+Church in the popular schools, and in the whole
+system of education. In England this is making itself
+felt already. The agitation for secularizing the schools,
+the immense majority of which have hitherto been denominational,
+gains continually in force and range under
+the influence of the news from Rome. The <hi rend='italic'>Daily
+News</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, said that the fact of ultramontanes desiring
+denominational schools was quite enough to convince
+Protestants of the superiority of secular and national
+schools. Yet Manning goes on asserting in the Vatican,
+that the infallibilist dogma will be the powerful
+magnet to draw Protestants by thousands into the
+Church. They are only too glad to believe him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You know already that the Roman Jesuits have
+declared it, in the last number of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, to be a
+wicked error to require moral unanimity of the Council
+for a dogmatic decree. They call it a Gallican heresy
+to make the consent of the whole Church, or the whole
+Council, a condition of dogmatic decisions. A simple
+majority is quite enough, for it is ultimately the will
+and mind of a single individual, viz., the Pope, wherein
+resides the whole force and authority of the decision.
+<pb n='418'/><anchor id='Pg418'/>
+If he assents to the judgment of a minority of the
+Bishops, it thereby becomes a law of faith for the whole
+Christian world; but if the majority is with him, all
+shadow of doubt vanishes. Whenever a controversy
+arises, whether in the scattered or assembled Church,
+it is the Pope's office to settle the difference by his
+decisive sentence, and to say, <q>This is truth: whoever
+believes it belongs to the Church, and whoever believes
+not, let him be accursed.</q> Once again it is clear that
+the Jesuits are of a different mind from the rest of the
+world. The world supposes that the Pope is to be
+declared infallible by the Council, and that only then
+will this infallibility become an universal article of
+faith. The Jesuits of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, on the contrary, think
+that the Pope&mdash;and he alone&mdash;is already and ever has
+been infallible, and that all authority in matters of
+faith is merely a light streaming forth from him and
+merging in his authority; the sole ultimate ground on
+which the Council, whether unanimously or by a
+majority, can declare the Pope infallible is because it
+knows that former Popes have held themselves to be
+infallible, and that the present Pope believes in and
+<q>feels</q> his own infallibility. And thus on the Jesuit
+theory we have the symbol of eternity, the snake biting
+<pb n='419'/><anchor id='Pg419'/>
+its own tail. Why must we regard the Pope as infallible?
+Because he says so, and every one must
+believe his word on pain of damnation. Why must
+we believe his word? Because he is infallible. And
+why are the Bishops of the whole world summoned
+to Rome? To bear witness to this logic of the
+Jesuits and the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, much like the compurgators
+in German law. The Pope affirms, <q>I am infallible,</q>
+and the 700 Bishops affirm that he is a trustworthy
+witness, and because he says so it is certain.
+The infallibilist Bishops admit the new theory of the
+legal force of dogmatic decrees of a majority. They
+too say, <q>When the Pope adheres to the majority, the
+article of faith is already defined, and to reject it is
+heresy.</q> They too revolve in the logical circle of the
+Jesuits. <q>Infallibility is always on the side taken by
+the Pope.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pretence of impartiality maintained for some
+time by the Vatican, and under which Antonelli
+sheltered himself against diplomatic inquiries and
+warnings, has now been abandoned. The Pope has
+taken his side in the most emphatic way; he feels and
+denounces as a personal injury every hesitation about
+the projected dogma, and his expressions of displeasure
+<pb n='420'/><anchor id='Pg420'/>
+grow constantly bitterer, and are sedulously disseminated,
+so that many Bishops are already terrified or
+driven into the infallibilist camp by the dread of his
+biting reproaches, for his words are immediately spread
+about in their dioceses and pass like a coin from hand
+to hand. Every work that appears anywhere in favour
+of his pet dogma is rewarded and sanctioned by a commendatory
+papal Brief, as being excellent, profoundly
+learned and conclusive, while the opponents of the
+dogma are branded in these documents as fools, blind
+or wicked assailants of what they inwardly know to be
+the truth. The <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi> lately contained three such
+papal missives on the same day.<note place='foot'>[The English <hi rend='italic'>Tablet</hi> and <hi rend='italic'>Dublin Review</hi> have received similar papal
+commendations.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> Meanwhile the opportunity
+of an allocution is seized for whetting the consciences
+of the Bishops of the minority, and telling
+the world how impure are the motives of their opposition,
+and how virtuous and noble-hearted are the
+prelates of the majority, the Italians and Spaniards.
+On March 28, the <hi rend='italic'>Osservatore Romano</hi> published a
+speech addressed by Pius to the Oriental prelates and
+papal vicars of the Latin rite, in which he said, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>totidem
+verbis</foreign>, that in the representative of Christ was renewed
+<pb n='421'/><anchor id='Pg421'/>
+what happened to Christ Himself before the tribunal
+of Pilate. Pilate suffered himself to be terrified by the
+assurance that, if he delivered Christ, he was no friend
+of Cæsar, and gave him up through fear of men. And
+so now, when the principles of eternal life and the
+rights of the Church and the Papal See are at stake,
+they are attacked by men who call themselves friends
+of Cæsar, but are really friends of the Revolution.
+<q>Be united,</q> added the Pope, <q>with me, and not with
+the Revolution, and be not misled by the desire for
+popularity and applause; to me and not to public
+opinion must your minds be directed (<foreign lang='it' rend='italic'>poiche dovete tener
+rivolte le menti a me e non alla opinione publica</foreign>). Put no
+trust in your own lights.</q> And he concluded, <q>On the
+basis of humility we will fight for the kingdom of God,
+without despairing and without fear of error.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus does Pius lay bare the egotism and cowardice
+of the Bishops who demur to infallibility. They
+are afraid of conflicts with the modern State, which
+is the product of the Revolution, and are loath to
+alienate the educated classes of the Church, which is
+mere popularity-hunting. Pius is in earnest in what
+he says about humility, and applies it to himself as
+well as others; he frequently says that he too is a
+<pb n='422'/><anchor id='Pg422'/>
+poor sinner, who has his place in the great hospital of
+diseased and sinful humanity, but with this difference,&mdash;in
+all other mortals sin begets error as its necessary
+consequence, but not with him. He is indeed a
+sinner, but in his case sin, through a special miracle,
+has no influence on the intellect, and when he feels his
+own infallibility, it would be presumptuous to dream of
+any self-exaltation or flattering illusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is of course understood that other and very various
+methods are also being made use of to diminish the
+numbers of the Opposition. Leave of absence is most
+readily accorded to them. It has become visible now to
+the blindest eye that the infallibilist dogma is the real
+object of the Council, for which alone it was convoked.
+The great aim hitherto in all sessions and votings has
+been gradually and imperceptibly to bring the Bishops
+to the point of practically accepting the decisions of the
+majority on questions of faith, and to get them to let
+the critical moment for protest and refusal of participation
+slip by unused. By this means precedents are
+created, and when the crucial question of infallibility
+comes on, they will be told that they have already
+virtually conceded the principle, and it is now too late
+to deny it.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='423'/><anchor id='Pg423'/>
+
+<p>
+The Governments have made it quite clear that it is
+only encroachments on the secular and civil domain,
+such as the relations of Church and State, and especially
+the twenty-one canons, which give them any anxiety,
+and have led them to make representations and
+protests. They disclaim all intention of meddling
+with questions of pure dogma, and therefore leave
+untouched the infallibilist theory, which Count Beust
+regards as a mere internal question of Church doctrine.
+This admission breaks off the point of all diplomatic
+arrows shot from Vienna, Paris, or anywhere else, for
+with infallibility the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> possesses all it wants for
+the attainment of its ends and the extension of its power
+over the social and political domain. Prévost-Paradol
+justly remarked the other day in the <hi rend='italic'>Journal des
+Débats</hi>, <q>The ministers who are so ready to let the
+infallibilist dogma slip through their fingers seem not to
+consider that it comprehends everything (<foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>qu'il emporte
+tout</foreign>). If the Pope is declared infallible to-day, he
+was infallible yesterday, and, if so, the Syllabus has
+precisely the same force and validity as if the Council
+had confirmed it.</q> So it is in truth, and moreover the
+Bulls and decisions of former Popes, which claim absolute
+dominion over the State, become inviolable articles
+<pb n='424'/><anchor id='Pg424'/>
+of faith. And then again it seems to pacify the Governments
+that Antonelli assures them he and his master
+are merely concerned with the theory, and have no intention
+of at once putting the new articles of faith into practice,
+summoning kings before their tribunal, overturning
+constitutions, and abrogating laws. On the contrary
+the Pope, if his mercy is appealed to, will look favourably
+on much belonging to the present civilisation and
+order of the State; only of course all this must be regarded
+as a mere indulgence which might at any
+moment be withdrawn. Meanwhile at Rome the disclaimers
+of the Governments of any desire to meddle with
+doctrine are sedulously made capital out of for working
+on the Bishops. They are referred to in proof that the
+whole lay world has nothing to say to this purely
+dogmatic question, and that the Governments themselves
+treat the matter as politically innocuous, and the
+Bishops are admonished to lay aside their foolish resistance
+to a doctrine which with the power of the
+Pope will also so mightily increase their own.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='425'/><anchor id='Pg425'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<anchor id='Letter_XXXVI'/>
+<head>Thirty-Sixth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 13, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi> has
+occupied the Fathers in almost daily sessions, and the
+Solemn Session for the public voting and promulgation
+of the decrees finally completed, which was first
+fixed for Easter Monday, has been postponed to Low
+Sunday. The number of amendments proposed gives
+the Bishops a great deal of labour, if the handling of
+these matters in the Council Hall is to be called a
+labour. What takes place is this: the Bishop who
+wishes to propose an alteration in the text of the
+Jesuit draft ascends the tribune and delivers an
+address, which as a rule the majority of his auditors
+cannot follow. Then he hands the President his
+motion, which however is not read, so that the Council
+gain their first knowledge of it through the Deputation,
+who have the amendments sent in to them&mdash;which of
+course are often very contradictory&mdash;printed and distributed
+<pb n='426'/><anchor id='Pg426'/>
+in the order of precedence. Thus, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>,&mdash;there
+were no less than 122 amendments proposed on the
+third chapter of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, occupying 44 folio pages.
+They began to be distributed on April 3, and most of
+the Bishops only got their copies on the 4th, when
+there was a sitting of the Council, and on the 5th the
+voting was to take place, so that most of them had no
+time even for a cursory reading: still less was it possible
+to give explanations or attempt to come to any oral
+understanding or comparison of the various views.
+Meanwhile the discipline of the majority continues to be
+admirable; they always know exactly how they are to
+vote, and obey the signal given as one man. Nor has
+there been any repetition of the wild paroxysm of passion
+on March 22, which turned the Hall into a bear-garden
+of demoniacs while Strossmayer was speaking. Many
+who were most conspicuous that day in their screams
+and gesticulations, seem to have felt ashamed since,
+and have no doubt also received a hint that such
+excesses of zeal may injure the good cause. But however
+well organized and docile the majority show themselves,
+the defects of the order of business, combined
+with the bad qualities of the Hall, become very perceptible,
+and the result of the many votings is a
+<pb n='427'/><anchor id='Pg427'/>
+confusion into which the Deputation tries afterwards
+to impart some sort of order.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strossmayer has made a representation to the Legates;
+at the sitting of March 22 he was called <q>a damnable
+heretic,</q> without having given any intelligible occasion
+for it, and he expects and demands a public reparation
+for this injury in whatever way they deem most suitable.
+What is still more important, his conscience has
+constrained him to put the question from the tribune,
+whether articles of faith are really to be decided by
+mere majorities according to the 13th article of the new
+order of business. When he expressed his conviction
+that moral unanimity was essential in such cases, he
+was interrupted by a frightful tumult and could not
+say any more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Legates have given no answer either to the three
+representations of the Bishops about the second order
+of business with its principle of majorities, or to Strossmayer's
+complaint. But on April 1 an admonition of
+President de Angelis was again read, directing the
+Fathers to be as brief as possible in their speeches,
+that they might not produce disgust (<emph>nausea</emph>) in the
+assembly by their prolixity or digressions, in which
+case they had only themselves to thank for the marks
+<pb n='428'/><anchor id='Pg428'/>
+of displeasure elicited. This was commonly understood
+as an indirect answer to Strossmayer; he had produced
+<q>nausea</q> in the prelates, and had therefore no cause
+for complaint. That was rather too much for the
+minority, and their international Committee of about
+30 Bishops resolved on presenting a common protest
+to the Presidents against the frequent interruptions and
+the wording of the admonition. Meanwhile Haynald
+was not interrupted, when he declared his agreement
+with Strossmayer. And it is worth notice that the
+Presidents have not as yet availed themselves of the
+right assigned them by the Pope to cut short the discussion,
+and get the speeches of the Opposition put an
+end to by the vote of the majority. There was nothing
+certainly in the subjects last under discussion to tempt
+them to do so. The Bishop of Rottenburg had proposed
+that the decree should contain no anathemas on persons
+but only on doctrines; the Germans and about six
+French Bishops agreed with him, but the rest would
+hear nothing of it. But it was significant that the
+most extreme section of infallibilists urged that in
+mentioning the Church in the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi>, the
+predicate <q>Romana</q> should alone be affixed to Church,
+with a perfectly correct instinct that the complete
+<pb n='429'/><anchor id='Pg429'/>
+Romanizing of the Church which they desiderate must
+lead to the annihilation of its Catholicity, and that the
+particular predicate necessarily excludes the universal.
+But they did not carry their point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is the universally prevalent feeling that all these
+detailed discussions and motions are mere preliminary
+skirmishes in which both parties practise themselves
+for the great contest and the decisive blow
+to be struck when the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi> comes on.
+The chief aim is to ascertain how far the minority can
+be induced to go, how much they will put up with, and
+what can be wrung from them by surprise or by quiet
+working on them individually. Public scenes, solemn
+protests before the whole world, are what the Legates
+want at any price to avoid. When the infallibilist
+dogma was to have been carried by sudden acclamation
+on St. Joseph's Day, four American Bishops handed in a
+paper declaring that, if this were done, they would immediately
+leave the Council and announce the reasons
+of their departure as soon as they got back to their
+dioceses. That took effect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is perhaps one of the most noteworthy and eventful
+changes in the policy of the Papal Court, that it
+now strains every nerve deliberately to exclude the
+<pb n='430'/><anchor id='Pg430'/>
+laity from all share in Church affairs, and endeavours
+to hold them aloof in every case where formerly the
+Church not only allowed but desired and demanded
+their regular participation. Thirty years ago it was
+quite different, but since the darling scheme of the
+Jesuits for complete ecclesiastical absolutism and centralization
+in Rome, both intensive and extensive, has been
+adopted, the maxims first avowed by Pius in his instructions
+to Pluym, his delegate at Constantinople,
+have been acted upon. The Pope there affirms that the
+participation of the laity in Church matters has been
+the greatest injury to the Church. In Germany and
+north of the Alps generally, all who thought they
+knew anything of the spirit and history of the Church
+had believed just the contrary, and considered those to
+have been the most prosperous ages of the Church
+when there was a cordial understanding and unsuspicious
+co-operation between clergy and laity; and they
+pointed to the example of earlier Popes, who attributed
+a priesthood to Christian princes, and exhorted them to
+take the most active part in ecclesiastical affairs. But
+historical reminiscences are of no account here; we must
+be content to float on the stream of the present, without
+looking backwards or forwards, with the great multitude.
+<pb n='431'/><anchor id='Pg431'/>
+<q>Fear nothing; I have the Madonna on my
+side,</q> said the master the other day to a prelate who
+had warned him of the danger incurred by the present
+system. That word explains the enigma of our present
+situation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The quarrels with the Orientals, which I shall perhaps
+relate more fully by and bye, have again thrown a
+clear light on the existing condition of things and the
+maxims adhered to. In a dispute about the privileges
+of a Convent here, an Armenian Archbishop with his
+secretary and interpreter were condemned by the Inquisition
+to imprisonment in one of the Jesuit houses&mdash;nominally
+<q>to make the exercises.</q> The unfortunates
+for whom this fatherly correction was decreed,
+were to <q>exercise themselves</q> till they were reduced
+to submission. They first betook themselves to the
+protection of the French embassy, but in accordance
+with instructions from Paris they were repulsed. Then
+they were taken under the charge of Rustem Bey,
+the Turkish ambassador at Florence, who has lately
+been residing here and transacting business with
+Antonelli. But the Cardinal soon intimated to him
+that Catholic priests, of whatever nation, were in Rome
+simply subjects of the Pope and under the jurisdiction
+<pb n='432'/><anchor id='Pg432'/>
+of the Inquisition. So the helpless Armenians had to
+succumb, and were favoured with domestic imprisonment,
+while a monk of another Order was made Abbot
+of the convent. The affair has naturally excited double
+astonishment. German, French, and English priests,
+who are here in great numbers, have had the unpleasant
+surprise of discovering that, according to the theory
+accepted here, they belong not only spiritually but bodily
+to the Pope, who is the absolute lord of their persons,
+and that the Inquisition can seize and incarcerate any
+of them at its pleasure. And the occurrence has recalled
+some very unlovely reminiscences. Men acquainted
+with Roman history have shown that Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>
+got Aonio Paleario and Carnesecchi to surrender themselves
+and had them burnt by the Inquisition; that
+Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> enticed to Rome by a safe-conduct the priest
+Fulgentio, who took the side of the State in the Pope's
+quarrel with Venice, and had him burnt there as <q>a
+lapsed heretic;</q><note place='foot'><q>Relapsum flammi ex lege addixit,</q> says the Dominican Bzovius in his
+Panegyric <hi rend='italic'>Paulus V. Borghesius</hi>, Rome 1626, p. 57.</note> that the English Benedictine Barnes,
+who was seized on Belgian soil and dragged to Rome,
+was first imprisoned in the Inquisition till he became
+insane, and then had to die in a lunatic asylum. It is
+<pb n='433'/><anchor id='Pg433'/>
+true that the Inquisition no longer inflicts torture and
+death, but nobody who has once come into its power
+would escape without having an abjuration extorted
+from him. The best security for a Western priest consists
+in the dread of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> of involving itself in
+trouble with his Government; were it not so, a foreign
+clergyman would be compelled to confine his conversation
+with clerics here to the weather, for there is always
+the most stringent obligation of denouncing any one
+the least suspected of heresy to the Inquisition, and a
+German clergyman, who got into any theological talk
+could hardly avoid that suspicion, so many would be
+the points of difference and opposition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There have been movements among the Hungarian
+Bishops, the connection of which is not quite clear. But
+the following facts are authentic. Simor, Archbishop
+of Gran and Primate, who for two months adhered with
+the rest of his countrymen to the minority, has gone
+over in the most demonstrative way to the majority,
+who pride themselves not a little on their conquest.
+It had been previously agreed between the Emperor
+and the Pope that he should be made a Cardinal, and
+he had been informed of this; but for a Cardinal-designate
+before his actual creation to vote against the
+<pb n='434'/><anchor id='Pg434'/>
+formally and energetically expressed will of the Pope
+would be monstrous. Such a thing is quite inconceivable
+in Rome. Moreover, before he became Primate, Simor
+spoke in favour of infallibilism.<note place='foot'>[It will be seen that Simor, with the other Hungarian Bishops, eventually
+voted among the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non-placets</foreign> and signed their protest. Cf. Letters
+<ref target='Letter_LXIV'>lxiv</ref>, <ref target='Letter_LXV'>lxv</ref>.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> Another Hungarian
+Bishop is gone over with him. Other Hungarian
+Bishops whom the minority, whether rightly or not, reckoned
+deserters, have gone home, and have there, it is
+said, represented the state of things in the very darkest
+colours, saying that there is no real freedom in the Council
+and the minority is breaking up. The Government
+at Pesth have consequently sent a confidential agent
+here to invite the Hungarian Bishops to escape the
+storm and return home. But they replied that the
+Government had better provide for the return of those
+already gone home, so as to add more strength to the
+minority on whom all the hopes of Catholics are
+now centred.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='435'/><anchor id='Pg435'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Thirty-Seventh Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 15, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The <hi rend='italic'>Constitutio Dogmatica de
+Ecclesiâ Christi</hi> will receive its definitive form in the
+Congregation of Easter Tuesday, but the substance is
+already fixed. It received many significant alterations
+in the course of discussion, and the ready reception
+accorded to it as a whole is due to the many detailed
+amendments which have been conceded. These changes
+are so important that the spokesman of the Commission,
+Pie of Poitiers, said in his closing speech it was
+really the work of the whole Council, so that the
+Fathers might truly say, <q><foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Visum est Spiritui Sancto et
+nobis</foreign>.</q> After the insertion of the word <q>Romana</q>
+before <q>Catholica Ecclesia,</q> the three first chapters
+were accepted in their amended form. The fourth, on
+faith and knowledge, was debated only cursorily and
+by a few speakers on April 8. But this chapter contains
+a passage of the greatest practical importance. At
+<pb n='436'/><anchor id='Pg436'/>
+the end occur these words: <q>Since it is not enough to
+avoid heretical pravity, unless those errors which more
+or less nearly approach it are shunned, we admonish all
+of the duty of observing the constitution and decrees
+where such evil opinions not expressly named here have
+been proscribed and prohibited by this Holy See.</q><note place='foot'><q>Quoniam vero satis non est, hæreticam pravitatem devitare, nisi ii
+quoque errores diligenter fugiantur, qui ad illam plus minusve accedunt:
+omnes officii monemus servandi etiam Constitutiones et Decreta quibus
+pravæ ejusmodi opiniones, quæ isthic diserte non enumerantur, ab hâc
+Sanctâ Sede proscriptæ et prohibitæ sunt.</q></note>
+The Bishops with good reason saw in this passage a
+confirmation of the judgments and increase of the
+authority of the Roman Congregations, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, of the tribunals
+through which the Pope exercises his power.
+It seemed to them desirable to give due expression to
+their objections, and accordingly a request was made to
+the President to appoint a further day for this subject.
+But as nobody had inscribed his name to speak, the
+request was refused and the whole debate was closed on
+that day, Friday, April 8. But to avoid the danger of
+opposition at the last moment and secure the decrees
+being unanimous, a certain concession was made by
+announcing that the closing paragraph should not be
+voted on till the whole <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi>, four chapters of
+<pb n='437'/><anchor id='Pg437'/>
+which only were as yet ready, should be completed.
+Thus a great point was gained,&mdash;a decree on matters of
+faith was carried by moral unanimity and not by
+surprise, but after a serious though compressed debate,
+which helped to win for the views of the minority a
+very perceptible influence on the form of the decree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But on the following day, April 9, a notice was
+communicated that, as the closing paragraph of the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>&mdash;beginning with the words <q>Itaque supremi
+pastoralis,</q> etc.<note place='foot'><q>Schematis de fide catholica conclusio, quæ incipit ab his verbis:
+<emph>Itaque supremi Pastoralis</emph>, etc., cum de eâ in ultimâ Congregatione generali
+non satis explicite actum fuerit, adhuc debet subjici Patrum suffragiis,
+antequam ad ferenda suffragia de toto Capite <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> procedatur. Ideo monentur
+Reverendissimi Patres, ut nunc in finem <emph>Emendationes de capite
+quarto</emph> hujus Schematis propositas etiam ad proximam Congregationem
+generalem secum deferre velint.</q></note>&mdash;had not been treated with sufficient
+particularity at the last general sitting, it must be again
+brought forward for deliberation before the whole
+fourth chapter came to be voted upon. The Fathers
+were thereby admonished that they might produce their
+amendments on the fourth chapter at the next sitting.
+This Congregation was held on April 12, when the final
+paragraph was put to the vote, and this roused them
+from the dream of unanimity. It was observed in the
+debate that if the voting on the paragraph were put off
+<pb n='438'/><anchor id='Pg438'/>
+till the whole <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi> was completed, this would
+be putting it off to the Greek Calends. But if the
+fixing of this <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> was undertaken directly after
+Easter, the more important subject of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de
+Ecclesiâ</hi> must give place to it, and so it might easily
+happen that infallibility would not come on at all this
+spring. To withdraw the closing paragraph would be
+not only not to maintain but to lose that favourite
+form of authoritative papal utterance through the
+medium of the Roman Congregations, which especially
+required to be upheld. Pie of Poitiers insisted on the
+fact that the paragraph had been published in the
+<hi rend='italic'>Allgemeine Zeitung</hi>, and could not therefore without
+peril be withdrawn even for the moment only.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Opposition were partly disposed themselves to
+treat the passage as unimportant. There were some
+who thought that in principle it was right for the
+Roman decisions to be respected and a certain authority
+attached to them, for this was necessary for the
+government of the Church; and the very wording of
+the passage distinguished these decisions from matters
+defined under anathema. So the minority resolved not
+to make any collective resistance to it, and many well-known
+members of the Opposition accepted it without
+<pb n='439'/><anchor id='Pg439'/>
+contradiction. Notwithstanding this, when the whole
+fourth chapter came to be voted on on Tuesday, April
+12, the desired unanimity was not attained; 83 Bishops
+gave a conditional <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> only. They handed in the
+grounds of their vote in writing, which seem to have
+been of various kinds, for even the Bishops of Moulins
+and Saluzzo, who are notorious infallibilists, were
+among them. Some, especially English Bishops, may
+well have demurred to the designation <q><emph>Romana</emph>
+Catholica</q> before <q>Ecclesiâ;</q> others may have thought
+it necessary to guard their rights as against majorities;
+but far the greater number wanted to repudiate the
+concluding passage. The vote was understood here in
+this latter sense, and no stone was left unturned to induce
+the Opposition to yield on that point. The step
+they have taken makes the deeper impression, because it
+is known that they have not put forth their full strength.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must be allowed that the final paragraph contained
+no actual doctrine which made the resistance of the
+Episcopate an absolute duty and required unanimous
+consent, but still it is obvious that the Council thereby
+sanctioned and strengthened what it ought to have
+reformed and limited, and therefore the carelessness
+manifested by a portion of the Opposition admits of no
+<pb n='440'/><anchor id='Pg440'/>
+favourable explanation. For the chief cause of the
+weakness and corruption of the Church is to be found
+in those Roman Congregations,&mdash;in the principles of
+some and the defects of others. The Bishops who
+accept the paragraph give their approval, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, to the
+Inquisition and the Index, and thereby prejudice not a
+little their moral influence and dignity. The vote of
+last Tuesday does not accordingly appear to me any
+proof of the firm organization or imposing power of the
+minority; it only shows what they might accomplish if
+they chose, but that they do not choose to do as much
+as they can. But the event will show whether the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> holds to its policy of securing unanimity by
+prudent and well-timed concessions. The minority
+will be urged and entreated first to withdraw their
+objections. If that fails, the Court must either give up
+the hope of unanimity or accept a very sensible humiliation.
+For if the text remains unaltered, those who
+have now given a conditional <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> can give no simple
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> next time.<note place='foot'>[Conditional votes, as will be seen, are not allowed in Solemn Sessions,
+but only a simple <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> or <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> Rome will certainly exhaust all her
+arts to avert the scandal of an open opposition in a
+Solemn Session.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='441'/><anchor id='Pg441'/>
+
+<p>
+I said in a former letter that the Opposition had
+taken up a position which no enemy from without
+could dislodge them from, but this did not imply at all
+that all internal dangers are overcome. These by no
+means consist in the decomposing influences of hope
+and fear which the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> makes such use of, or the
+prospect of a Cardinal's Hat, or again in party divisions
+at home, which might have disturbed and divided the
+French, Austrian and North American Bishops. The
+latter danger might have made itself felt at the commencement
+of the Council, but constant intercourse
+and community of experiences during this winter have
+put an end to it. The real disease which has weakened
+the minority in the past and threatens it in the future
+lies deeper&mdash;the great internal differences of Catholicism,
+which are now being brought to a decisive issue, do not
+coincide with the antagonism of the rival parties in the
+Council, but divide the minority itself. The main
+question, exclusive of the immediate controversy and
+partly independent of it, which divides Catholics into
+two sections so sharply that no sympathy or confidence
+can bridge over the gulf, remains unsolved within the
+minority and constantly endangers their coherence. The
+common designation of Liberal Catholics tends rather
+<pb n='442'/><anchor id='Pg442'/>
+to obscure than to express the principle of this division.
+By Liberal Catholics may be understood those who
+desiderate freedom not only <emph>for</emph> but <emph>in</emph> the Church, and
+would subject all arbitrary power of Church as well as
+State in matters of religion to law and tradition; but
+that is the end they aim at, not their fundamental
+principle. Such requirements concern the constitution
+rather than the doctrine of the Church, law rather than
+theology. They are important, but they do not contain
+the crucial point of the present contest in the Church.
+The root of the matter lies not simply in the relation to
+be maintained towards the chief authority in the Church,
+but in the right relation to science; it is not merely
+freedom but truth that is at stake. It is mainly as an
+institution for the salvation of men and dispenser of the
+means of grace that the Church has to deal with the
+labouring, suffering and ignorant millions of mankind.
+And in order to guard them from the assaults of popular
+Protestantism, a popular Catholicism and fabulous representation
+of the Church has been gradually built
+up, which surrounds her past history with an ideal halo,
+and conceals by sophistries and virtual lies whatever is
+difficult or inconvenient or evil, whatever, in short, is
+<q>offensive to pious ears.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='443'/><anchor id='Pg443'/>
+
+<p>
+But such a transfigured Catholicism is a mere shadow
+Catholicism, not the Church but a phantom of the
+Church. Its upholders are compelled at every step to
+employ various weapons, to ward off any triumph of
+their enemies and avoid disturbing the faithful in a
+religious sentiment artificially compounded of error and
+truth combined. The more the notion of the supreme
+glory, and even infallibility, of the Pope was developed,
+the greater solidarity with the past became requisite,
+that the history of the Popes might not be suffered to
+bear witness too strongly against such views. To quote
+a significant phrase in constant use here during this
+winter, <q>the dogma must conquer history.</q><note place='foot'>[Cf. <hi rend='italic'>supr.</hi> p. <ref target='Pg348'>348</ref>.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> A contest
+has arisen, not of dogma but of a theological opinion
+against history, that is against truth; the end sanctifies
+the means. It was held allowable in order to save the
+Church and for the interest of souls to commit what
+would in any other case have been acknowledged to be
+sin. Not only was history falsified, but the rules of
+Christian morality were no longer held applicable where
+the credit of the hierarchy was at stake. The very sense
+of truth and error, right and wrong,&mdash;in a word the
+conscience&mdash;was thrown into confusion. Thus, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>,
+<pb n='444'/><anchor id='Pg444'/>
+when Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> demanded that the Huguenot prisoners
+should be put to death, he did right, for he was Pope and
+a Saint to boot. Since Charles Borromeo approved the
+murdering of Protestants by private persons, it is better
+to approve it than to call his canonization in question.
+Or one moral aberration is got rid of by another.
+Many of the leading Catholic writers of this century
+deny that Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiii.</hi> approved the massacre of St.
+Bartholomew,<note place='foot'>[See an exhaustive article on the subject from a Catholic pen in the
+<hi rend='italic'>North British Review</hi> for October 1869.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> or that heretics have ever been put to
+death at Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This spirit, which falsifies history and corrupts
+morals, is the crying sin of modern Catholicism, and it
+reaches high enough. Of the three men who are
+commonly held in France to stand at the head of the
+Catholic movement, one wrote a panegyric on Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>,
+another under the name of <hi rend='italic'>Religion et Liberté</hi> attacked
+absolutism in France while defending the double absolutism
+in Rome, and a third vindicated the Syllabus&mdash;all
+three thus manifesting the influence of this deplorable
+spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the other hand the genuine Catholic, who wishes
+also to be a good Christian, cannot separate love for his
+<pb n='445'/><anchor id='Pg445'/>
+Church from the love of goodness and truth. He
+shrinks from lies in history as much as from present
+adulation, and is divided by a deep moral gulf from
+those who deliberately seek to defend the Church by
+sin and religious truth by historical falsehood. This
+contrast is most conspicuously exhibited in the question
+of infallibility, as one example may suffice to prove.
+The principles of the Inquisition have been most
+solemnly proclaimed and sanctioned by the Popes.
+Whoever maintains papal infallibility must deny certain
+radical principles of Christian morality, and not
+merely excuse but accept as true the opposite views of
+the Popes. Thus the Roman element excludes the
+Catholic and Christian. Such differences obviously cut
+deep into men's ethical character, and divide them far
+more decisively than any striving for common practical
+ends or community of interest and feeling can unite them
+on the ground of prudence. In presence of so profound
+an internal division the question of the opportuneness
+of the definition of infallibility assumes a very subordinate
+place, and the mere inopportunist is immeasurably
+removed from the decided opponent of the dogma.
+Between Bishops who consider Popes fallible and those
+whose conscience is easy enough to swallow certain
+<pb n='446'/><anchor id='Pg446'/>
+doctrines of former Popes on faith and morals, and who
+do not see any deadly peril for souls in giving a higher
+sanction to these dogmas&mdash;between anti-infallibilists
+and mere inopportunists&mdash;the difference is far deeper
+than the union. The inopportunists stand nearer to the
+infallibilists than to those who oppose the dogma on
+principle. They are divided from the one party on a
+mere question of prudence, from the other on a question
+of faith and morality; with the one they are united by
+an internal bond, with the other by an external bond,
+only which circumstances may dissolve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is the true explanation of the halting policy so
+often observed in the Opposition. The honest opponents
+of infallibility wished to secure the support of
+those who do not properly speaking share their sentiments.
+But they should never for a moment have
+forgotten that they have to attack what Gratry has
+rightly described as an <q>école de mensonge.</q> And the
+greatest honesty and outspokenness is necessary for
+defending the honour and truth of Catholicism against
+that school. Instead of that they exhibit themselves
+in a false light and obscure the situation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> by his letters to Guéranger and
+Cabrière has completely and publicly identified himself
+<pb n='447'/><anchor id='Pg447'/>
+with that school, at the very moment when Gratry was
+so unmistakeably exposing its spirit, and he has made
+this still clearer by the distinctions bestowed on Margotti
+and Veuillot at the very moment when Newman
+characterized them as the leaders of <q>an aggressive and
+insolent faction.</q> He said plainly to the French Bishop
+Ramadie of Perpignan that <q>only Protestants and
+infidels denied his infallibility.</q> His official organ
+describes the Opposition as allies of the Freemasons,
+and he himself calls all who oppose his infallibility bad
+Catholics. It is true that the Opposition has gradually
+been brought to make very decided declarations of
+opinion, and has itself expressed doubts about the
+future recognition of the Council. But that has complicated
+its attitude still further. The other party may
+ask, <q>Why these doubts about Œcumenicity? The
+Bishops of various countries are assembled in great
+numbers; the Governments offer no hindrances, and the
+Council has united itself with the Pope in the greatest
+freedom in the capital city of the Church. Why then
+doubt the good results and œcumenical character of the
+Council and the validity and future recognition of its
+decrees?</q> And the Opposition can only answer, <q>For
+the sole and single reason that the Pope destroys all
+<pb n='448'/><anchor id='Pg448'/>
+freedom of action by his regulations, that he has already
+overthrown the ancient constitution of the Church and
+exercises a power over the Council incompatible with
+the rights of the Bishops and the freedom of the
+Church.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French note is to be presented to-day to Antonelli
+and next week to the Pope, instead of to the
+Council. It is doubted whether Pius will communicate
+it to them.<note place='foot'>[He refused to do so.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='449'/><anchor id='Pg449'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Thirty-Eighth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 17, 1870.</hi>&mdash;It is a good sign that the
+minority have at length recognised the imperative
+necessity of grappling directly with the problem of
+papal infallibility, and examining in their own writings
+this question on which the future of the Church depends.
+It has been perceived now that it was an unfortunate
+notion to put forward only grounds of expediency,
+discretion, and regard for public opinion; for no answer
+was left when Spanish, South American, Irish, Neapolitan
+and Sicilian Bishops said that no such public
+opinion existed with them, that some were apathetic
+and others had long held the doctrine, which would
+create not the slightest difficulty or inconvenience with
+them, and that they were the majority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was high time therefore to take firmer ground, and
+now this has been done by Cardinals Schwarzenberg
+and Rauscher and Bishop Hefele, three of the most influential
+<pb n='450'/><anchor id='Pg450'/>
+prelates of the Church, or rather by four, for
+Bishop Ketteler too has either composed or got some one
+to compose a work on papal infallibility.<note place='foot'>This proved to be a mistake.</note> But the whole
+edition had the ill luck to be seized in the Roman Post-office,
+so that not a single Bishop got a copy. The
+authorities seem to know that the work opposes the
+dogma, on which all the thoughts and plans of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+now hinge, although Ketteler not long ago showed himself
+an adherent of the doctrine, and only assailed the
+opportuneness of defining it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>, as the official organ of the Court, now
+announces the principle on which the Papal Government
+acts. One must distinguish, it says, between the
+Custom-house and Post-office. The Custom-house gives
+the Bishops the missives and packets addressed to them
+unopened, for it assumes that they will only have
+proper books sent them. It is different with the Post-office,
+which is bound not to favour the dissemination
+of error.<note place='foot'><q>Elle estime justement qu'elle a le devoir de ne pas favoriser la diffusion
+de l'erreur ou des attaques contre l'autorité des Vicaires de Jésus-Christ.</q></note> So the conscientiousness of the officials of
+the Roman Post-office is a model for the rest of the
+world, and it is understood that the habitual opening
+of letters, so far from being immoral, is an expression of
+<pb n='451'/><anchor id='Pg451'/>
+the purest and most delicate morality; for might not a
+letter contain some error or attack on the rights of the
+Vicar of Christ? And how could the officials answer to
+God and His earthly representative for even unconsciously
+co-operating in the spread of such error?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I have not seen Ketteler's publication, I can only
+quote the judgment of a friend who has read it and
+thinks it will do good service. The other three works
+are before me. They must all have been printed at
+Naples, for the Roman police has to look after the consciences
+not only of the Post-office secretaries and letter-carriers,
+but of the compositors, printers, bookbinders
+and booksellers. It cannot allow that any breath of
+error should sully the pure mirror of their souls, even
+though concealed under the veil of the Latin tongue;
+and the corroding poison becomes worse when prepared,
+as in this case, by Bishops and Cardinals.<note place='foot'>The infallibilists are of course luckier. Their writings are readily
+printed and circulated. At the same time with the writings mentioned
+above, Archbishop Spalding has published a letter to Dupanloup, emphatically
+denying that he had spoken against the opportuneness of the dogma
+in the paper he drew up with several other American Bishops, and declaring
+himself a zealous advocate for it.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I will speak first of Cardinal Rauscher's work, which
+is the most comprehensive of the three, and touches on
+many questions passed over in the other two. Written
+<pb n='452'/><anchor id='Pg452'/>
+in a calm and dignified tone, it carefully avoids every
+word or phrase which could offend the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and goes
+to the utmost length in making concessions possible for
+any one to accept without becoming an infallibilist;
+but it will nevertheless pour much oil on the flame of
+anger which has been blazing for weeks past, and singes
+now one Bishop and now another. Papal infallibility,
+says the Archbishop of Vienna, must extend to everything
+ever decided by any Pope, and the whole Christian
+world must hold with Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi> and his Bull
+<hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi> that the Popes have received power
+from Christ over the whole domain of the State. That
+will be welcome news to those who want to exclude
+the Church altogether from civil society. That the
+Popes themselves in the ancient Church did not hold
+themselves infallible, that the whole history and conduct
+of the ancient Church in doctrinal controversies
+would be an inexplicable riddle on the infallibilist
+hypothesis, and moreover that the Popes have often
+fallen into open errors rejected by the Church&mdash;all this
+is well established, though the author cites only some
+particular facts from the abundant sources he has to
+draw upon. He then shows the sharp antithesis between
+the ancient doctrine of the Church and the Popes
+<pb n='453'/><anchor id='Pg453'/>
+on the relations of Church and State and the enunciations
+of Popes since Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi> and Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>
+With papal infallibility the whole mediæval theory of
+the unlimited power of Popes to depose kings, absolve
+from oaths of allegiance, abrogate laws, and interfere
+in all civil affairs at their will, must be declared to be
+an immutable doctrine with which the Church stands
+or falls. The Christian Emperors would have treated
+such a doctrine as high treason, and even in the days of
+Charles the Great it would have excited universal
+astonishment. If this doctrine really had to be preached
+now to the Christian people, it would be a triumph for
+the enemies of religion, for the best men would soon be
+convinced of the utter impossibility of paying any
+regard to the precepts of the Christian religion in civil
+matters. The Cardinal proceeds to dwell on the forgeries
+by which the great master of scholastic theology,
+the favourite and oracle of all Jesuits and ultramontanes,
+Thomas Aquinas, was led to adopt the doctrine
+of infallibility, and how again his influence shaped the
+whole scholastic system and drew the great Religious
+Orders, who were bound by oath to maintain his teaching,
+to adopt it. He concludes in these weighty
+words:&mdash;<q>If the Pope is declared to be, alone and
+<pb n='454'/><anchor id='Pg454'/>
+without the Episcopate, infallible in faith and morals,
+the Œcumenical Councils are robbed of the authority
+recognised by Gregory the Great, when he said he
+honoured them equally with the four Gospels; for they
+would be and would always have been, even at the
+time of the Nicene Council, superfluous for deciding on
+faith and morals. This doctrine would be a declaration
+of war against the innermost convictions of the Church,
+and she would be robbed for the future of those aids
+supplied by the Council of Trent at her extremest need;
+even the See of Rome would lose the support the
+Bishops then assembled gave to it, for after the close
+of that Council, the power of the Popes became greater
+than it was before.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The remark of Cardinal Rauscher that, when the
+dogma of papal infallibility is defined the Church will
+be deprived of one of her most effective institutions,
+viz., General Councils, has made a great impression here,
+as far as I can see. It is readily understood that an
+assemblage of men, educated to believe in the infallibility
+of one master, and to repeat mechanically without
+examination whatever he tells them, would have no
+influence among men and would be universally regarded
+as superfluous, a mere idle pageant rather than any
+<pb n='455'/><anchor id='Pg455'/>
+real support to the Church. The Church would be impoverished
+by the loss of one member of its organism,
+and that very member would be paralysed which in
+moments of distress and danger had most effectually
+protected her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bishop Hefele's work is worthy of the man who is
+beyond question the most profound historical scholar
+among the members of the Council. One can only
+regret that a writer so pre-eminently qualified to pronounce
+a clear and weighty opinion on the whole controversy
+in all its bearings should have confined himself
+to the single question of the condemnation of Pope
+Honorius. Those who wish to know the history of Honorius
+and the Sixth Council in 681, and to see a flagrant
+example of the utterly crude and unscientific poverty of
+that modern scholasticism which is treated as theology
+in the Jesuit lecture-rooms, may be recommended a brief
+study of this question, which has already produced so
+many writings and hypotheses, simple and easily understood
+as it is in itself. A General Council, acknowledged
+by the whole Church in East and West, condemned
+a Pope for heresy after his death, and anathematized
+him on account of a dogmatic letter he issued. The
+sentence was without contradiction accepted throughout
+<pb n='456'/><anchor id='Pg456'/>
+the whole Church, the Roman Church included,
+and even introduced into the profession of faith to
+which every new Pope had to swear at his election.
+It was repeatedly confirmed by subsequent Councils,
+and in short remained in full force for centuries, till
+the Popes were seized with a desire to become infallible.
+It is only since the fifteenth and sixteenth century,
+and especially since the Jesuits&mdash;beginning with
+Bellarmine&mdash;undertook to revise history according to
+the requirements of their new dogmatic system, that
+this extremely contradictory fact had to be submitted
+to a process of manipulation, and the rock on which all
+schemes of papal infallibility seemed to be wrecked had
+to be got out of the way. <q>Si plus minusve secuerit
+sine fraude esto,</q> was said in the old Roman law which
+allowed a creditor to cut a pound of flesh from the body
+of his debtor, and so do the knives of the Jesuits and
+curialists cut right into the flesh of history. The Acts
+of the Sixth Council were said to have been corrupted
+through the perfidy of the Greeks, and the whole history
+and even the letters of Honorius to be forgeries. The
+Popes themselves, Rome, and the whole West had let
+themselves be fooled by the cunning Greeks into condemning
+<pb n='457'/><anchor id='Pg457'/>
+an innocent and orthodox Pope as a heretic,
+and the letters of Pope Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi> must also be forgeries.
+In short these reasoners were caught in the meshes of
+their own net, and when in 1660 Lucas Holstein got the
+Roman <hi rend='italic'>Liber Diurnus</hi> printed&mdash;an excellent edition of
+which Rozière lately brought out in Paris&mdash;the whole
+impression was suppressed, for it contained the old form
+of oath which expressly attested the condemnation of
+Honorius. But twenty years later the book appeared
+to the great chagrin of Rome, and the infallibilist
+school had to change their front. They now turned to
+the letters of Honorius and tried to show that they
+were perfectly orthodox. But that did not touch the
+fact that a General Council had solemnly condemned
+a Pope for heresy, and that the whole Church&mdash;the
+Popes and the Roman Church included&mdash;had accepted
+the sentence without demur. Hefele has shortly and
+pointedly exposed the shifts and dishonesties of this
+long controversy carried on in more than a hundred
+polemical works; and he has taken care, at the same
+time, to establish conclusively the wide-reaching facts
+and general results of the inquiry. He shows (page
+11), how up to the eleventh century every Pope swore
+<pb n='458'/><anchor id='Pg458'/>
+to the truth that an Œcumenical Council had condemned
+a Pope for heresy.<note place='foot'>[English readers may be referred to Renouf's <hi rend='italic'>Case of Honorius Reconsidered</hi>.
+Longmans, 1869.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Schwarzenberg's work is chiefly directed
+against Archbishop Manning.<note place='foot'>It is now understood to have been written by Dr. S. Mayer under his
+direction.</note> Hitherto the infallibilists,
+to avoid pushing their theory into sheer absurdity,
+had appended the condition of <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign>, which
+everybody could interpret more or less stringently
+according to his own view, and theologians had actually
+given twenty-five different explanations of what was
+required for an <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign> decision. In order to
+get out of this labyrinth, Manning has propounded
+a simpler theory. Everything according to him depends
+on the Pope's intention; whenever he <q>intends
+to require the assent of the whole Church,</q> he is
+infallible.<note place='foot'>[See <hi rend='italic'>Pastoral on Infallibility of Roman Pontiff</hi>. Longmans, 1869.]</note> Schwarzenberg points out with pungent
+irony to what monstrous consequences this would lead.
+He recalls the saying of Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi> that the Pope
+holds all rights locked up in his breast. And thus it
+must be assumed on Manning's theory that the Pope
+holds in his own mind all doctrines present and future,
+<pb n='459'/><anchor id='Pg459'/>
+and draws from this internal treasure-house under
+divine inspiration what he wishes to reveal to the
+world, so that infallibility becomes inspiration. Has
+it occurred to the Cardinal that this is precisely the
+personal opinion of the very man who has now, for
+the sake of his own infallibility, resolved to plunge
+the Church into an internal conflict, of which no one
+can see the end?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is then further pointed out that, if the new dogma
+with its consequences prevails, all Governments will
+put themselves in an attitude of self-defence against
+the Church. Bishops as well as Councils cease to be
+any necessary part of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>magisterium</foreign> of the Church,
+and there is no longer any need for the distinct
+assent of the Episcopate; the only office left them
+is to praise and accept with thanks every decision of
+the Pope's. Perhaps they may still be allowed to give
+their advice before he decides, but they have nothing
+to say to the decision itself or after it, but only to obey
+and promulgate the papal revelations.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='460'/><anchor id='Pg460'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Thirty-Ninth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 23, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The four chapters of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Constitutio Dogmatica de Fide</hi> bear in their ultimate
+shape such evident marks of the influence of the
+minority, and so many concessions were made in them,
+that there is a danger of overlooking the greatness of
+their defeat and their change of mind, should they
+finally accept the supplemental paragraph mentioned
+in my last letter but one. Although it was determined
+that the minority should make no general opposition
+to this paragraph, there were not a few Bishops
+who saw clearly enough its importance and danger.
+They consoled themselves at first with the promise that
+the suspicious passage, which clothed the Roman Congregations
+and the mischief they work in the Church
+with conciliar sanction, would not be voted upon till
+the still incomplete portion of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi>
+came on for final settlement. And when, in spite of
+<pb n='461'/><anchor id='Pg461'/>
+this promise, it was announced to be the general wish
+of the Commission that the voting should take place at
+once, the opponents were quieted by a written assurance
+that no new power was thereby to be given to the
+Roman Congregations, and nothing to be altered about
+them, but all to remain as of old. Gasser, Bishop of
+Brixen, had the courage to say, in the name of the
+Deputation, that the passage did not refer to heresy,
+though it expressly binds the Bishops to the observance
+of the constitutions and decrees of the Holy See,
+not only in regard to heresy (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>hæretica pravitas</foreign>), but also
+theological errors and controversies. It is incredible
+that any one could be deceived by such a ruse as this,
+and yet it is a fact that not even forty Bishops made
+the omission of this paragraph a condition of their
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>. As the Opposition seemed thereby to be shrunk
+to less than five per cent. of the Council, the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+was persuaded that it could get rid of them altogether
+by acting with spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On April 18 appeared an admonition with the following
+passage: <q>It must be remembered that according
+to the Apostolic Brief, <hi rend='italic'>Multiplices inter</hi> (of Nov. 27,
+1869), prescribing the method of procedure in public Sessions,
+no other vote can be given in them than a simple
+<pb n='462'/><anchor id='Pg462'/>
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> or <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>.</q><note place='foot'><q>Animadvertendum quippe est, quod in publicâ Sessione juxta Litteras
+Apostolicas <hi rend='italic'>Multiplices inter</hi> d. d. Novembris 1869 Num. <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>, quo modus
+procedendi in Sessionibus publicis præscribitur, non liceat aliter suffragium
+dare, nisi pure et simpliciter per verba: <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> aut <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>, excluso
+alio quovis modo.</q></note> The Fathers who had given
+conditional votes in Congregation had to choose now
+whether they would accept the chapter unconditionally
+or reject it <q>sans phrase.</q> It was foreseen that this
+alternative would disclose the weakness of the Opposition,
+and that those of its number who shrank from a
+decisive rejection would be won for the majority, for
+the real test of an Opposition is not in words but acts.
+Protests which are not answered, and speeches which
+are not heard, may be patiently borne with, as long as
+all goes well in the public voting. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+reckons that the minority will not now dare to show
+itself, and thus the unanimity will not be disturbed:
+and its consequent resolve might decide the whole
+course and upshot of the Council. If the minority
+gives in here, it will have suffered a first defeat, and
+must reconstitute itself on a new basis, by taking part
+in decrees carried under anathema, which are against
+its own convictions, it breaks with its past, accepts the
+responsibility and solidarity of the Council and complicity
+<pb n='463'/><anchor id='Pg463'/>
+with the majority. This is to admit that all
+the petitions and protests it was thought necessary to
+present in the interests of the freedom of the Council were
+superfluous and aimless, and all the warnings offered of
+the threatened danger of its œcumenicity being questioned,
+etc., unmeaning. For the Council to publish
+anathemas implies the conviction that it is free, legitimate,
+and œcumenical, and that the order of business
+is acceptable. The minority thereby would themselves
+testify to everything they have hitherto assailed, and the
+only thing left for them would be to insist on their
+rights as guarded by the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>consensus unanimis</foreign>. All other
+grounds for calling the Council in question would be
+abandoned, and it might fairly be doubted whether the
+Opposition would adhere to that after giving up so
+much; at the same time it is morally certain that
+the Court and the majority do not acknowledge that
+right.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the General Congregation of the 19th, four
+Bishops, Latour d'Auvergne, Dreux-Brézé, La Bouillerie,
+and Mermillod, went to the Pope and requested
+him to have the decree on infallibility brought forward
+directly after the Solemn Session of the 24th. They
+thought rightly enough the favourable moment had
+<pb n='464'/><anchor id='Pg464'/>
+come and all was now ready. Pius received the
+Bishops, who came as deputies of the 400, with great
+distinction, and replied that he would discuss the matter
+with the Presidents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As it is impossible to see how the Bishops or the
+Governments could get rid of the <foreign rend='italic'>regolamento</foreign> when
+once it is fairly established, the Opposition Bishops
+know that they will have to approach the great question
+in the position they take for themselves to-morrow in
+the first solemn voting, and with such power, unanimity,
+and influence as they thereby establish their claim to.
+It is still open to them up to to-night to use the present
+moment for a complete victory. They only need declare
+that their protests and warnings were not idle words but
+seriously meant, that the incongruities which endanger
+the freedom of the Council and suggest doubts of its
+legitimacy must be got rid of before any decrees are
+published under threat of everlasting damnation, and
+that until they are listened to on this point they refuse
+to take part in any solemn voting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, as far as I know of the Opposition, the majority
+of them have no ear or heart for such counsel; their
+grand object is to avoid any decisive conflict, and so
+to-morrow they will simply yield,&mdash;to consider quietly
+<pb n='465'/><anchor id='Pg465'/>
+afterwards their future plan of campaign! Some have
+thought they might save their honour and conscience
+by a written explanation of their vote. In the public
+international meeting of the Opposition these plans
+were rejected, but two rough drafts of the kind were
+proposed the day before yesterday, one by the Germans,
+one by the French. Both are too strong and dignified
+to find many supporters, and too weak to justify the
+Opposition in the eyes of the Christian world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is the sacred duty of the Bishops in Council to
+bear witness to the ancient doctrine of the Church,
+and to reform it when it has been obscured by abuses
+in practice and in the rule of the hierarchy. The
+more abuses there are, so much the more difficult, and
+so much the more indispensable also is this reform.
+What the Catholic world expects of the Council is not a
+fresh sanction, still less an increase, of these abuses, but
+the deliverance and purification of the Church from
+them. But to accept the paragraph which recommends
+obedience to the constitutions and decrees of Roman
+Congregations is to make the fulfilment of this serious
+duty, on which the fate of the Church hinges, impossible.
+For that paragraph will confirm and clothe
+with new authority decrees which are a disgrace to the
+<pb n='466'/><anchor id='Pg466'/>
+Church and an injury to civilisation, wherein the
+confused morality of dark centuries is taught and
+Christian morality denied; and that too without any
+examination or discussion, any limitation or exception.
+The Bishops will thereby degrade themselves to servants
+of the Roman <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>prelatura</foreign>, and sink into accomplices
+of the Inquisition. We are told indeed that the paragraph
+will not touch dogma, but for ethics and practice
+it is almost more important than infallibility itself. It
+gives full play beforehand for arbitrary caprice and
+paves the way for the infallibilist dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If we look into the future, the questions come before
+us of unanimity in matters of faith, and of the confirmation
+and acceptance of the Council throughout the
+Church. As to the latter, the Bishops will make it far
+harder for the Governments to stand by them if to-morrow
+they virtually repudiate their own protests. The
+question of unanimity remains as weighty as before, and
+the gross errors of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> in its attack on Strossmayer's
+vindication of the principle of moral unanimity
+in decisions on faith has greatly lightened the task of
+two learned Bishops, who undertook to put in a clear
+light the true doctrine of the Church on the subject.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If the voting of to-morrow goes altogether in the sense
+<pb n='467'/><anchor id='Pg467'/>
+of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, the inference will be that all the positions
+of the minority can be turned, and that as they are resolved
+to avoid any collision, they may be brought by
+skilful manipulation not to trouble the moral unanimity
+any further. Many of them console themselves with
+the thought that they are only sacrificing everything to
+peace and harmony, and are not responsible for the
+undertaking they have been deluded into.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The propositions of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi> give
+abundant room for manœuvring. There are many
+opportunities for apparent concessions and for dividing
+and perplexing the Opposition, and finally driving them
+into a corner, so that in mutual distrust of one
+another they may abandon all hope of making any
+successful resistance, and satisfy themselves that as
+nearly everything has been given up already it is not
+worth while to risk a catastrophe by taking any further
+step.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='468'/><anchor id='Pg468'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fortieth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 24, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The final votes of <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> or
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign> on the four chapters of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi>
+are to be taken in to-day's public Session. And thus
+after four months and a half a theological decree, or
+rather a batch of decrees and doctrinal decisions, will be
+brought to a successful issue, and the first ripe fruit
+plucked from the hitherto barren tree of the Council,
+so that there will be something in black and white to
+carry home. As these four chapters have been subjected
+to the pruning and toning down of the Opposition,
+they bear little resemblance to the original draft
+of the Jesuits, and the minority may lay claim to a
+victory which four months ago could scarcely have been
+hoped for. What has been gained for the future by
+these theological commonplaces and self-evident propositions
+is of course another question. The general
+view of the Bishops appears to be that there is no real
+<pb n='469'/><anchor id='Pg469'/>
+gain for the Church in these propositions, which can
+only excite the wonder of believing Christians that it
+should be thought necessary to prohibit at this time
+of day such fundamental errors. The value of their
+labours they take to lie, not in what they have said,
+but in what they have with so much trouble expunged
+from the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Several Bishops attach great weight to the consent
+of the Deputation to substitute for <q>Romana Ecclesia</q>
+the words <q>Ecclesia Catholica et Apostolica Romana.</q>
+Others think it a matter of indifference. Hefele's
+pamphlet on Honorius has created such a sensation
+that the Pope has commissioned the Jesuit Liberatore
+and Delegati, Professor at the Sapienza, to white-wash
+Honorius, and make away with everything in his
+history incompatible with the new dogma. Pius is
+persuaded, and his infallible <q>feeling</q> tells him, that
+everything must have happened quite differently from
+what is represented; how, he knows not, but he thinks
+that the Jesuit and the Roman professor have only to
+make the proper investigations and they will soon discover
+the requisite materials for refuting the German
+Bishop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Wednesday, April 20, Rome was illuminated to
+<pb n='470'/><anchor id='Pg470'/>
+celebrate the Pope's return from Gaëta. The Roman
+officials greatly dislike these illuminations on financial
+grounds, for they have to contribute to the cost out of
+their own pockets. A triumphal arch was erected for
+the Pope at the end of the narrow street leading to St.
+Peter's piazza, and the following inscription in letters
+of fire was conspicuous far and wide:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<quote rend='display'>
+<lg>
+<l>Popoli chinatevi innanzi al Vaticano,</l>
+<l>Ecco il Pontefice ch'io vi conservai nei giorni di pericolo,</l>
+<l>Esso è la pietra angolare della mia chiesa,</l>
+<l>Il refugio degli oppressi,</l>
+<l>Il sostegno del povero,</l>
+<l>Lo scudo della civiltà e della fede.</l>
+</lg>
+</quote>
+
+<p>
+That is the witness Pius bears to himself. To theologians
+it may be a new idea that he personally is the
+corner-stone of the Church, but that is only one of the
+many predicates and prerogatives which may be deduced
+from infallibility. Two isolated voices cried <q>Evviva
+il Papa infallibile.</q> It was clear the multitude was to
+be stimulated to swell the cry, but, as before, all remained
+quiet. The attempt has been sometimes made
+before, whether by amateurs or under official inspiration
+I know not, and then Veuillot asserts in the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>
+that he has heard this shout of vast multitudes breaking
+forth spontaneously from the exuberance of their
+<pb n='471'/><anchor id='Pg471'/>
+hearts. It is like the music of the spheres which only
+Pythagoras heard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ketteler's pamphlet was finally published on April
+18, and the Bishop has begun to distribute it. It is
+really directed against the dogma itself, which for a
+long time people could not believe, and not merely
+against the opportuneness of defining it. How much
+better would it have been for the interests of the
+Church, if the necessity had been recognised long ago
+for looking this Medusa's head straight in the face, and
+defying its petrifying gaze, and if our Bishops had
+plainly and decisively announced their resolution last
+December to have no dealings with it. Now at least
+Cardinal Rauscher does not spare warnings; he perceives
+the gravity of the danger and has had a new
+fly-leaf distributed, showing that the promulgation of
+papal infallibility will elevate the two Bulls <hi rend='italic'>Unam
+Sanctam</hi> (of Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>) and <hi rend='italic'>Cum ex Apostolatûs
+officio</hi> (of Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>) into rules of faith for the whole
+Catholic world, and thus it will be taught universally
+in Europe and America, henceforth, that the Pope is
+absolute master in temporal affairs also, that he can
+order war or peace, and that every monarch or bishop
+who does not submit to him or helps any one separated
+<pb n='472'/><anchor id='Pg472'/>
+from him ought to be deprived of his throne if not of his
+life, besides the other wonderful doctrines in the second
+of these Bulls, which must reduce every theologian to
+despair.<note place='foot'>[Cf. <hi rend='italic'>Janus</hi>, pp. 382-4.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> All that is nothing to the majority, for
+whom the law of logical contradiction has no existence.
+It is their watchword that the dogma conquers logic
+as well as history. One of their German members gladly
+re-echoes the idea that the proper aim and office of the
+Council is to stop the mouth of arrogant professors;
+if that is accomplished everything is gained, according
+to this pastor of a flock feeding on red earth. On the
+other hand I heard very different words fall to-day
+from the mouth of another German Bishop, who said
+he was constantly asking himself how long the German
+Bishops would look on and put up with everything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great and all-absorbing question now is what will
+next be brought before the Council after April 24. In
+the natural order the second part of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi>
+would come on, which is comparatively innocuous
+though abundantly capable of improvement. But is
+it not time to fabricate the talisman of absolute power,
+the infallibilist dogma? Then would the Council be
+in the fullest sense and for ever provided for and
+<pb n='473'/><anchor id='Pg473'/>
+finished, and the master would praise his servants.
+Many will answer the question in the affirmative.
+The two modern Fathers, Veuillot and Margotti, strain
+every nerve daily for that end, and many of the most
+zealous French Bishops&mdash;as those of Moulins, Bourges,
+and Carcassonne, and the indefatigable Mermillod&mdash;have
+represented to the willing Pius, as I mentioned
+yesterday, that now is the nick of time, and that he
+may gratify the longing of his faithful adherents by
+placing infallibility in the order of the day. These
+Frenchmen consider that their Government, now occupied
+with the plébiscite, will not trouble itself with the
+acts and decisions of the Council, and moreover needs
+the help of the clergy. Amid the bustle of the plébiscite,
+they think the new dogma, and even the reproduction
+of the Syllabus in the twenty-one canons, will
+excite little stir or indignation, for the French can
+only embrace one idea at a time, and the Parisians only
+discuss one subject in their <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>salons</foreign>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Banneville has at last actually presented the memorandum
+of his Government to the Pope, as President of
+the Council, and with the intimation that it should be
+communicated to the Fathers. That of course will not
+be done, for both Pius and Antonelli are irritated
+<pb n='474'/><anchor id='Pg474'/>
+at the paper. Pius is annoyed at the innermost kernel
+of the dogma being so openly exposed to view, when
+Count Daru says, <q>You want to hand over all rights
+and powers to the Church, and then by the infallibilist
+dogma to concentrate this plenitude of temporal and
+spiritual power in the one person of the Pope.</q> That
+is of course what the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> does want, but it should be
+uttered in pious and somewhat obscure phraseology,
+as the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> usually speaks, and not be called by its
+right name in this bold and naked fashion. Antonelli
+again is much displeased, because his favourite distinction
+between the principles in which the Church
+must be inexorable, and the practice in which Rome
+will graciously concede the very opposite, is met here
+by the inquiry whether the faithful are actually to be
+taught henceforth that they must believe what they
+need not carry out in practice, and accept as divinely
+revealed rules which they may without hesitation
+transgress? He had reckoned on a better understanding,
+on the part of the French Government, of the
+favourite Roman theory of infinite and inexhaustible
+papal indults and dispensations, and is glad that he need
+make no reply to the note which throws so glaring a
+light on the morality of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and its notions of
+<pb n='475'/><anchor id='Pg475'/>
+duty and truth. He contents himself with telling the
+diplomatists that there would be some difficulty in the
+Pope's communicating the note to the Council. Clearly,
+for they must at the same time be directed to attempt
+a refutation, and that would lead to very awkward consequences.
+The French Government might indeed
+have sent their memorandum to each Bishop separately,
+but then they would have had the prospect of the non-French
+Bishops of the majority returning it unopened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Count Trautmansdorff has also presented the memorandum
+of the Austrian Government to the Cardinal
+Secretary of State. It runs as follows:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Nous voulons seulement élever aussi notre voix
+pour dégager notre responsabilité et signaler les conséquences
+presqu'inévitables d'actes qui devraient être
+regardés comme une atteinte portée aux lois qui nous
+régissent. Comme le Gouvernement français, c'est
+à un devoir de conscience que nous pensons obéier,
+en avertissant la cour de Rome des périls de la voie
+dans laquelle des influences prepondérates semblent
+vouloir pousser le Concile. Ce qui nous émeut, ce
+n'est pas le danger dont nos institutions sont menacées,
+mais bien celui que courent la paix des esprits et le
+maintien de la bonne harmonie dans les relations de
+<pb n='476'/><anchor id='Pg476'/>
+l'état avec l'Église. Le sentiment qui nous fait agir
+doit paraître d'autant moins suspect au St. Siége qu'il
+correspond à l'attitude d'une fraction importante des
+Pères du Concile, dont le dévouement aux intérêts du
+Catholicisme ne saurait être l'objet d'un doute. Placés
+sur un tout autre terrain que cette fraction, puisque
+nous n'obéissons qu'à des considérations politiques,
+nous nous rencontrons toutefois aujourd'hui dans le
+désir commun d'écarter certaines éventualités. Cette
+coïncidence de nos efforts nous permet de croire qu'en
+prenant la parole au nom des seuls intérêts de l'État
+nous ne méconnaissons pas ceux de l'Église. Si la
+démarche du Gouvernement français, que nous désirons
+seconder de tout notre pouvoir, vient en ce
+moment donner un appui à la minorité du Concile
+et l'aider à faire prévaloir des idées de modération ou
+de prudence, nous ne pourrons que nous féliciter d'un
+tel résultat, bien que, je le répète, notre action soit
+parfaitement indépendante et doive rester en tout cas
+indépendante de celle des membres du Concile.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally the observations of the French Government
+are urgently commended to the attention of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='477'/><anchor id='Pg477'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Forty-First Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 27, 1870.</hi>&mdash;We find ourselves in a
+remarkably critical position here. The great event
+so long expected of the first promulgation of dogmas
+is over, and the desired unanimity has been successfully
+attained for these four chapters of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema
+de Fide</hi>, notwithstanding the supplemental paragraph.
+Two Bishops who could not overcome their dislike to
+that paragraph preferred to stay away or leave Rome
+for the day. All the curialists are in high feather,
+and are congratulating each other on their victory,
+boasting that they have gained three most important
+points without any public opposition. First, the Pope,
+for the first time for 350 years,<note place='foot'>[Since, that is, the Lateran synod of 1517 under Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> and in contradiction
+to the practice of the first 1000 years of Church history,
+has defined and published the decrees in his own
+name as supreme legislator, just like those masters of
+<pb n='478'/><anchor id='Pg478'/>
+the world, Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>, Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> and Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi>, merely
+with the addition that the Council also sanctions them.
+Secondly, the new order of business has now been
+virtually accepted by all, and the protest abandoned.
+Thirdly, the conclusion, which is meant to invest with
+conciliar authority the former dogmatic decrees of the
+Popes, has been accepted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The excitement visible on the countenances of the
+majority, when Schwarzenberg, Darboy, Rauscher and
+Hefele were called up to vote, showed what had been
+expected. The mass of the majority say the same
+thing will happen when the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on the Church has
+to be voted on; the minority answer that it will not,
+and that they only want to avoid wasting their powder
+before the time; <q>la minorité se recueille,</q> like Russia
+after the last war, and on the division day will be
+found fully equipped for the fight. We shall soon see,
+for that day is not far distant. But now what next?
+The infallibilist party are afraid of this dogma being
+lost after all, like a ship wrecked in port. They reckon
+that the time is approaching when the Council must
+inevitably be prorogued, and therefore urge the Pope
+to break through the regular order of the <hi rend='italic'>Schemata</hi>, and
+bring forward at once either the whole <hi rend='italic'>Schema de
+<pb n='479'/><anchor id='Pg479'/>
+Ecclesiâ</hi> or the article on papal infallibility which has
+been interpolated into it. The four French Bishops
+assured him that they spoke in the name of the 400.
+Pius would not of course feel any very constraining
+influence in their wishes <foreign rend='italic'>per se</foreign>, for he knows well
+enough that the 400 are composed mainly of his foster-sons
+and of the Bishops of the States of the Church
+and the Neapolitans, who all speak or hold their peace
+and sit or stand as they are bidden. But it would be an
+unspeakably bitter sacrifice for him to refuse to his
+trusty adherents what he so earnestly desires himself,
+and to let these 400 or at least many of them say, <q>Your
+own organ, the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, the Jesuits, Veuillot, Margotti&mdash;have
+forced this question upon us; we have agitated
+for it and staked our name and theological credit on it,
+and now it is all to be labour lost!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But now the writings of the German Bishops have
+appeared and the notes of the Governments have been
+delivered. To the French note is added a more urgent
+one from Austria, as well as a Prussian, a Portuguese and
+now also a Bavarian note, and all breathe the same spirit.
+All give warning that they shall regard the threatened
+decrees on the power and infallibility of the Pope as a
+declaration of war against the order and authority of
+<pb n='480'/><anchor id='Pg480'/>
+the State. Even the English Government leaves no
+room for doubt about its mind, and if the Pope&mdash;as I
+know&mdash;fears above all things any manifestation of
+feeling there, he might learn from Manning that the
+strongest antipathy is felt among all classes, high and
+low, to the proposed dogmas, and that English statesmen
+see in them nothing less than a suicidal infatuation.
+Manning has thoroughly authentic proofs of
+that in his hands, but of course he won't produce
+them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pius is in a chronic state of extreme irritation. He
+sees with pleasure his two favourite journals&mdash;the
+<hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi> and <hi rend='italic'>Unita</hi>&mdash;abuse the Opposition Bishops in
+the most contemptuous language, and he indulges
+himself in outbreaks of bitterness against those who
+question his infallibility, which pass from mouth to
+mouth here but which one dares not write down.
+Even Cardinal Bilio is alarmed at such ebullitions, and
+affirms that he is constantly urging moderation and
+forbearance on the Pope, and has already warded off a
+great deal of mischief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What strikes us foreigners is the evident indifference
+to the Council and its acts manifested by the
+inhabitants of the eternal city of every class. It is
+<pb n='481'/><anchor id='Pg481'/>
+seldom spoken of in society, and what absorbs the
+attention of the world north of the Alps seems hardly
+to have the least interest for the Romans, what is there
+heard of with astonishment they hardly think worth a
+passing mention. And if ever the Council is spoken of,
+it is in hurried, mysterious, abrupt sentences, for every
+one says the espionage system has never been in such
+force here as since the opening of the Council, and a
+large staff lives by the trade. I know persons here
+whose doors are constantly watched by spies, who do
+not even conceal themselves, and if the Roman theologians
+had such rich materials for their investigations
+as is possessed by the Roman police, they would not
+have their equals in the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Romans as a rule are fully aware of the financial
+value of the infallibilist doctrine, and know right well
+that a large increase of revenue as well as power from
+all countries is looked for as its product. That in
+their eyes is already an accomplished fact. They
+know for certain that the dogma will be at once proclaimed,
+and there is hardly a Roman here who has
+not an uncle or brother or nephew in orders and may
+not hope to share the anticipated profits in his own
+person or in the person of his relatives. The curialists
+<pb n='482'/><anchor id='Pg482'/>
+here say, <q>We have lost so much by the diminution of
+the States of the Church, and so many payments, benefices
+and lucrative posts have passed out of our hands,
+that we absolutely require to be indemnified in some
+other way, and this the new dogma is intended to do
+and must do for us.</q> If ever the Pope is acknowledged
+throughout Christendom as an infallible authority, it is
+inevitable that ecclesiastical centralization should take
+much larger dimensions than before. Not only doctrine,
+but everything concerning Church life will be
+drawn to Rome and there finally settled. Theologians
+may undertake to distinguish between matters to which
+the Pope's infallible authority extends or does not
+extend, but in practice everything signed with his
+name will be held to be an utterance of divine truth,
+and nothing which is not attested with that signature
+will be held valid. There is a proverb here&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<quote rend='display'>
+<lg>
+<l>Quei consigli son prezzati</l>
+<l>Che son chiesti e ben pagati.</l>
+</lg>
+</quote>
+
+<p>
+And who would not gladly pay a handsome sum to be
+armed with an infallible decision, which will at once
+crush all opposition and put down all adversaries?
+The golden age of papal chanceries and clerks lies
+not in the past, in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries
+<pb n='483'/><anchor id='Pg483'/>
+when, as a court prelate of the day tells us,
+the papal officials were daily employed in counting up
+gold pieces; it will first dawn on the day this truly
+golden doctrine of infallibility is promulgated. Were
+Cicero to re-appear in Rome now, he might repeat
+what he said in the Oration <hi rend='italic'>Pro Sextio</hi>, <q>Jucunda res
+plebi Romanæ, victus enim suppeditabatur large sine
+labore;</q> only he could no longer add, <q>Repugnabant
+boni, quod ab industriâ plebem ad desidiam avocari
+putabant.</q> For such <q>boni</q> no longer exist at
+Rome; rather is the account of Tacitus completely
+verified, <q>Securi omnes aliena subsidia expectant,
+sibi ignavi, aliis graves.</q><note place='foot'>Tac. <hi rend='italic'>Annal.</hi> <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi></note> Another thing is the large
+and incurable deficit in the Roman finances, which
+must increase every year. There is an annual expenditure
+of thirty million francs to cover, and the
+Peter's pence, which came to fourteen millions in 1861,
+have sunk to about eleven millions, notwithstanding the
+collections ordered to be made everywhere twice a
+year. No further help can be obtained from loans.
+M. de Corcelles, who has exposed this uncomfortable
+state of things with the best intentions, has no other
+remedy to propose but a great increase of Peter's pence.
+<pb n='484'/><anchor id='Pg484'/>
+It is hoped in Rome that the different nations will contribute
+larger sums than before to the Pope, now he is
+become infallible and thus more closely united to Deity.
+But they reckon much more on the enormous centralization
+and all-embracing monopoly of all possible dispensations,
+indulgences, consultations, canonizations, and
+decisions on moral, liturgical, political, dogmatic and
+disciplinary questions. They remember the treasures
+amassed in the temple of Delphi in ancient days, and
+expect the new oracle to be erected on the Tiber to
+attract, like a vast magnet, not iron but gold and
+silver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neither Pius nor the Monsignori and other curialists
+think it conceivable that the minority will hold out
+to the last in their opposition. They reckon securely
+on this fraction of the Council being broken up by
+fear and discouragement, and that few if any of them
+will let matters come to a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>non placet</foreign> in the next public
+Session, and thus openly confess themselves unwillingly
+subdued. To those Roman clerics, who are
+accustomed to look at religious questions only as
+the ladder by which to mount to an agreeable life and
+good income, courage and steadfastness in the confession
+of ascertained truth is something strange and
+<pb n='485'/><anchor id='Pg485'/>
+inconceivable. Fear and hope, calculations of loss
+and gain, will finally decide the Bishops' votes&mdash;that
+is the firm persuasion of every Italian member of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. So much is certain: if on the very eve of the
+Solemn Session, when the new dogma is to be promulgated,
+it was certainly known that eighty Bishops
+would say <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign> next day, the Session would be
+countermanded and the Church saved. The first question
+for us Germans is of course whether we can trust
+our Bishops? Will they abide steadfast? Or will they
+at last sacrifice themselves and the truth, their clergy
+and their flocks? As to what immediately concerns
+the clergy, this is not strictly a question of doctrine
+belonging to the sphere of religious faith and mystery,
+where one might make a willing submission of mind to
+a decree held to be the voice of divine revelation; it is
+a pure question of historical facts to be determined by
+historical evidence, of points on which every educated
+man capable of judging evidence, whether a Catholic or
+not, can form an independent judgment. Every one
+with eyes to see can answer with absolute certainty
+these three questions, on which the whole matter
+hinges&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1. Is it true that the admonition to Peter to confirm
+<pb n='486'/><anchor id='Pg486'/>
+his brethren has always and in the whole Church been
+understood of an infallibility promised to all Bishops
+of Rome?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+2. Is it true that this infallibility of all Popes has
+been taught and witnessed to in the whole Church
+through all ages down to our own day?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+3. Is it true that no Pope has ever taught a doctrine
+rejected by the Church, and that no Pope has ever
+been condemned by the Church for his doctrine?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is absolutely impossible for any one, who feels
+compelled by his own investigation of history to answer
+these three questions in the negative, to submit
+inwardly to the opposite decision of the Council, whatever
+external homage he may pay to it. Ten Councils
+will not be able to shake him for a moment in his conviction;
+he will only say, <q>pur si muove.</q> His doubts
+will be turned, not against what is historically certain but
+against the Council; he will call in question the real freedom,
+the intrinsic claims and authority of this Council,
+and&mdash;to go no further&mdash;the two successive regulations
+for conducting business supply in this case abundant
+materials for the question. And it is just as impossible
+for a man who has a notion of historical certainty to
+believe in any one else's mind being changed by the
+<pb n='487'/><anchor id='Pg487'/>
+decree of an assembly of Bishops. If a well-educated
+man told me he had just come to the conclusion that
+Julius Cæsar never lived, I should not believe in his conviction
+but in some disorder of his mental faculties, and
+should advise him to undergo medical treatment. And
+so, if the new dogma is proclaimed and the clergy
+submit either tacitly or expressly, no cultivated man
+in all Germany will believe that the thousands of
+scientifically trained men who have had a German
+education have suddenly changed their convictions,
+because some hundreds of Italians and Spaniards have
+chosen to decree away the testimony of history.
+<q>Facts are stubborn things.</q> Public opinion will recognise
+only two alternatives in the case of those who
+submit, ignorance or dissimulation and falsehood. And
+the effect will be an immeasurable moral degradation
+of the Catholic clergy and a corresponding decay of
+their influence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This consideration will not of course make the
+slightest impression on the majority of the Council, or
+even on those Germans who belong to it. We have
+psychological riddles to deal with here. How, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, are
+we to explain the fact that a man, who has taught the
+very opposite doctrine in a manual of instruction for
+<pb n='488'/><anchor id='Pg488'/>
+the higher class of colleges published seventeen years
+ago, and has let it pass through eleven or twelve
+editions without a word being altered, is now in Rome
+one of the most zealous promoters of the definition,
+and is constantly affirming that all the clergy except a
+few professors will readily submit?
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='489'/><anchor id='Pg489'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Forty-Second Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 29, 1870.</hi>&mdash;What I mentioned in my
+last letter as a pamphlet of Cardinal Rauscher's, is a
+printed memorial addressed to the Presidents of the
+Council, bearing the title of <hi rend='italic'>Petitio a pluribus Galliæ,
+Austriæ et Hungariæ, Italiæ, Angliæ et Hiberniæ et
+Americæ Septentrionalis Præsidibus exhibita</hi>, and dated
+April 20th. It states that papal infallibility is beset by
+many objections and difficulties, which require an examination
+such as is impossible in a General Congregation.
+Among them is one of supreme importance,
+bearing directly on the instruction to be given to the
+faithful on the divine commandments and the relation
+of the Catholic religion to civil society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>The Popes have deposed Emperors and Kings, and
+Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi> in the Bull <hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi> has established
+the corresponding theory, which the Popes
+openly taught down to the seventeenth century under
+<pb n='490'/><anchor id='Pg490'/>
+anathema, that God has committed to them power over
+temporal things. But we, and almost all Bishops of
+the Catholic world, teach another doctrine. We
+teach that the ecclesiastical power is indeed higher
+than the civil, but that each is independent of the
+other, and that while sovereigns are subject to the
+spiritual penalties of the Church, she has no power to
+depose them or absolve their subjects from their oaths
+of allegiance. And this is the ancient doctrine, taught
+by all the Fathers and by the Popes before Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi>
+But if the Pope, according to the Bull <hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi>,
+possessed both swords&mdash;if, according to Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>'s Bull
+<hi rend='italic'>Cum ex Apostolatûs officio</hi>, he had absolute dominion
+by divine right over nations and kingdoms,&mdash;the Church
+could not conceal this from her people, nor is the subterfuge
+admissible,<note place='foot'>Antonelli's, notoriously.</note> that this power exists only in the
+abstract and has no bearing on public affairs, and that
+Pius has no intention of deposing rulers and princes;
+for the objectors would at once scornfully reply, <q>We
+have no fear of papal decrees, but after many and
+various dissimulations it has at last become evident
+that every Catholic, who acts according to his professed
+belief, is a born enemy of the State, for he holds himself
+<pb n='491'/><anchor id='Pg491'/>
+bound in conscience to do all in his power to
+reduce all kingdoms and nations into subjection to the
+Pope.</q> We need not define more precisely the manifold
+accusations the enemies of the Church might
+deduce from this.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This difficulty then must be most carefully sifted
+before papal infallibility is dealt with. The Conference
+we demanded on March 11 may do much towards
+clearing it up. But the question, whether Christ really
+committed to Peter and his successors supreme power
+over kings and kingdoms is, especially in this day,
+one of such grave importance that it must be directly
+brought before the Council, and examined on all sides.
+It would be inexcusable for the Fathers to be seduced
+into deciding, without thorough knowledge and sifting,
+on a question which has such wide consequences and
+affects so deeply the relations of the Church to human
+society. This question therefore must necessarily be
+brought before them, before the eleventh chapter of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi> can be taken in hand. It might, if
+you please, be separately treated. But, as it cannot be
+adequately judged of without a thorough examination
+of the relations of the ecclesiastical to the civil power,
+it appears to us very desirable that the thirteenth and
+<pb n='492'/><anchor id='Pg492'/>
+fourteenth chapters of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> should be discussed
+before the eleventh.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What first strikes one about this remarkable document
+is, that the German Bishops belonging to the
+minority&mdash;Martin, Stahl, Senestrey and the Tyrolese
+are of course out of the reckoning&mdash;are not represented
+here. Does this indicate a real divergence of view or
+only a difference of tactics? The former notion seems
+to me inconceivable. It is impossible that men like
+Hefele, Ketteler, Eberhard and the rest should have any
+doctrinal predilection for the system of papal absolutism
+extended over sovereigns and the whole political
+and civil domain. Certainly they too are so strongly
+opposed to the infallibilist dogma because it involves
+the mediatizing of all kings and governments. I can
+therefore at present discover no explanation of this
+phenomenon, and cannot allow any room for the suspicion
+that the persistently active curialistic influences
+have succeeded in dividing the German Bishops from
+the rest of the minority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What will the Presidents do with a document so
+serious, so moderate and so incisive? What have they
+done already? So far as I know, nothing. It is a
+principle, and has now become an habitual practice with
+<pb n='493'/><anchor id='Pg493'/>
+them, to leave all representations and petitions of the
+minority unnoticed and unanswered. The directing
+Deputation, which is intrusted with the entire control
+of the Council, feels quite justified in adopting this
+line by the papal ordinances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The policy hitherto pursued by the Jesuits and the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> was, first to extend to the utmost the comprehensive
+office of the Church, as legislator for the nations
+and guardian of faith and morals; and then, by making
+the Pope absolute master and dictator of the Church,
+to assign to him all that had been claimed for the
+Church, so that he&mdash;acting of course in the interests of
+religion and morality, but simply according to his own
+good pleasure&mdash;should have every office, person and
+institution subject to him, and that the final appeal in
+every cause should lie to his tribunal. Since all this
+can only be secured and guaranteed by the infallibilist
+dogma, the inferences on the relations of Church and
+State drawn by the opposing Bishops form precisely the
+chief recommendation of that dogma in the eyes of the
+Legates, the Italian Cardinals, the Spanish and Italian
+Bishops and those of the French who are ultramontanes.
+They all say among themselves, if not aloud before the
+world, <q>That is just what we want; our very object is
+<pb n='494'/><anchor id='Pg494'/>
+to get the doctrine on the relations of Church and State
+changed, the independence of civil society and the civil
+power abolished, and the complete temporal supremacy
+of the Church&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the Pope&mdash;at least gradually established.</q>
+It is not indeed advisable to say this as yet in
+such explicit and unreserved terms, but the reason why
+the infallibilist dogma is so opportune and indispensable
+is exactly because it implies jurisdiction over the temporal
+sphere, which the Pope can according to circumstances
+either leave unused and say nothing about it, or suddenly
+draw forth for use like a weapon concealed under
+a mantle. He has dealt thus with the Austrian Constitution;
+while he let alone other countries, whose constitutional
+systems must have been partly at least a scandal
+on Roman principles, he pronounced the Austrian Constitution
+abominable (<foreign rend='italic'>nefanda</foreign>). And any one, who
+wishes to examine the practical significance of this
+infallible judgment, need only go to the Tyrol and
+observe how it has been already explained there to the
+inhabitants by their enthusiastic clergy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the audience, when he presented the French note
+to the Pope, Banneville expressed the wish of his
+Government that the discussion of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi>
+(with the chapter on infallibility) might at least not be
+<pb n='495'/><anchor id='Pg495'/>
+taken before its time&mdash;which was equivalent to saying,
+<q>At least give us time, for the matter is not yet ripe
+for discussion.</q> Hitherto delay has been for the interest
+of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, for it was expected that the minority
+would wither away and finally be extinguished; they
+trusted to the power so often proved of the Roman
+solvents. The article of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> which told the
+prelates, <q>We care nothing for your talk about moral
+unanimity in matters of dogma, and shall make the
+new dogma in spite of your opposition,</q> was written <foreign rend='italic'>in
+terrorem</foreign>, and was meant to hold up before the refractory
+the terrible perspective of a contest emerging in the
+abortion of an impotent schism. The article has not
+in the main produced the desired effect, for the Bishops
+still hold together and bind themselves by writings and
+public declarations, and the number of those who can
+no longer with any decency desert to the majority
+threatens to increase. Now therefore it is the interest
+of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> to allow no further delay, but to bring
+forward the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Bavarian ambassador has presented the note of
+his Government, which appeals emphatically to the
+attitude of the German Bishops who represent in the
+Council sound principles on the relations of Church and
+<pb n='496'/><anchor id='Pg496'/>
+State.<note place='foot'><q>Animés d'un profond respect pour l'autorité <emph>légitime</emph> du S. Siége,
+nous sommes obligés d'autre part de préserver de toute atteinte présente ou
+future les rapports entre l'église et l'état (as lately settled by the Concordat
+and the Constitution). Nous joignons nos instances aux remonstrances
+du Gouvernement français et nous nous croyons appelés à le faire
+d'autant plus, que dans le sein du concile lui-même une grande partie des
+représentants de l'Église d'Allemagne, dont le dévouement religieux est
+bien connu, atteste par son attitude que nos craintes sont loin d'être
+vaines.</q></note> It cannot indeed appeal to its own Bishops,
+for three of them are active and fiery supporters of
+infallibilism and the supremacy of the Pope over Kings
+and States. It was previously thought impossible for a
+German Bishop to desire to see the day when the Popes
+could again grasp the reins of temporal dominion which
+had dropped from their hands, depose monarchs, give
+away countries, abolish constitutions, annul laws and
+dispense oaths of allegiance. But this spectacle we
+now enjoy! For the pastors of souls must be assumed
+to intend to make dogmas, not for a mere pastime or
+for the enrichment of theological commentaries and
+text-books, but in order to reduce the theory to practice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pius did not say, when receiving the French memorandum,
+whether he would communicate it to the Council.
+But Antonelli has now stated that the Pope, though
+President of the Council, will not find it at all advisable
+to do so. That is only consistent, for every curialist
+<pb n='497'/><anchor id='Pg497'/>
+regards the Council as under strict tutelage, and in fact
+only existing by the will of the Pope and living by the
+breath of his mouth. It is simply from care for their
+health that he withholds so unsound a document from
+his Bishops. Antonelli says he will not reply to it, as
+it contains nothing new, and merely repeats the note of
+Feb. 20, which is not strictly true. He adheres to his
+favourite distinction, <q>In theory we are inexorable,
+grasping, high-flying, as Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi> or Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>,
+but in practice full of forbearance and compassion.
+We take account of human weakness and blindness,
+and, if the Northern nations do not acknowledge the
+prerogatives of our priestly absolutism, and desire to
+retain their political and religious liberties in spite of
+our theoretical condemnation of them, we shall not force
+matters to an open breach and shall make no use of
+the old methods of compulsion.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now are the Governments agreed or not in reference
+to the Council? They are no doubt all agreed in their
+aversion to the new dogma and the renewal of the
+Syllabus, but there is a great difference in their practical
+attitude. The rulers in some States mean to utilize
+the occasion for bringing about the entire separation of
+Church and State, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, for gradually extruding the Church
+<pb n='498'/><anchor id='Pg498'/>
+and the clergy from all the positions of public trust
+they still hold, and reducing the Church to the level of
+a sect tolerated and as far as possible ignored by the
+State, and secularizing education, marriage and family
+life. This is the attitude of Belgium, Italy and Spain
+towards the Council. Out of Belgium there is no
+country so remarkably indifferent about the Council
+and its decrees, whatever they may be, as Italy, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the
+Italian Government and many millions of Italians.
+The statesmen there say, <q>We have no Concordats to
+defend, for they have fallen with the old Governments;
+the State has no longer any concern with religion and
+the Church, which are mere private affairs of the individual.
+And thus the separation of Church and State
+is already in principle accomplished.</q> I can vouch for
+the following saying of a high public official there:
+<q>There are hundreds of us who do not know whether
+we are among those excommunicated on political grounds
+or not. In a dangerous illness we may send for a confessor,
+and then we shall find out.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The number of those who desire and aim at this
+complete divorce of Church and State is legion. Their
+view predominates in the French cabinet since Daru's
+retirement, and most of them view what is going on in
+<pb n='499'/><anchor id='Pg499'/>
+Rome with satisfaction and hope. The more frantic
+and insolent is the conduct of the Papalists, so much the
+better in their opinion, for so much easier and more painless
+will the separation be for civil society. To make
+papal infallibility and the Syllabus into dogmas is in
+their eyes a step which, far from hindering, one should
+wish to see thoroughly effected. When the Church is
+caught in this net, she must assume the full responsibility
+of all doctrines and principles established by any
+of the Popes, and she has herself pronounced judgment
+on their utter incompatibility with the whole existing
+order of society. The State can then no longer go
+hand in hand with her anywhere, and will dismiss
+her. It is impossible to be ignorant that this view
+is widely prevalent, and is rapidly and powerfully increasing.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='500'/><anchor id='Pg500'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Forty-Third Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, April 30, 1870.</hi>&mdash;Now that the matter has
+gone so far, those about the Pope no longer make any
+secret of the fact that for many years&mdash;indeed from
+the beginning of his pontificate&mdash;he has formed the
+design of making papal infallibility an article of faith.
+A work has lately been distributed here, <hi rend='italic'>Riflessioni
+d'un Teologo sopra la Riposta di Mgr. Dupanloup a
+Mgr. Arcivescovo di Malines</hi>, Torino 1870. The writer
+says, <q>Could the Bishop of Orleans be ignorant that
+Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> has always intended to define this dogma and
+condemn Gallicanism? All the acts of his pontificate
+have been directed to this end. Nay, we affirm distinctly
+that he believed himself to have received a
+special mission to define the two dogmas of papal
+infallibility and the Immaculate Conception.<note place='foot'><q>Si, diciamolo altamente, Pio <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> credette aver ricevuto speciale missione
+di definire la Immacolata Concezione e la infallibilita pontificia.</q></note> And as
+<pb n='501'/><anchor id='Pg501'/>
+he is under the special guidance of the Holy Ghost, his
+will sufficiently establishes the opportuneness of this
+definition.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was obviously written for the eyes of the Pontiff,
+whose whole life is surrounded as with a rose-garland
+of miraculous deliverances, illuminations and
+divine inspirations. And thus the veil is now dropped,
+and the time come for speaking openly. Up to the
+end of last summer, and even till December, the
+answer given from Rome to all inquiries and anxieties
+of Bishops or Governments was, that there was no intention
+of bringing infallibility before the Council and
+that the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> was mistaken; the Court of Rome was
+not responsible for what an individual Jesuit might
+write. Antonelli gave the most quieting assurances on
+all sides. But meanwhile the Committee of Theologians
+employed in preparing the materials for the
+Council had already voted this new dogma, under
+direction of the highest authority, and Archbishop
+Cardoni had sent in his report upon it, which was
+received by all against the single vote of Alzog. The
+subjects to be brought before the Council were carefully
+concealed from the Bishops, and an oath of silence
+imposed on the theologians who were summoned, in
+<pb n='502'/><anchor id='Pg502'/>
+order that they might come to Rome unprepared and
+without the necessary books, and might simply indorse
+the elaborations of the Jesuits as voting-machines in
+the prison-house of the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is merely repeating what is notorious in Rome to
+say that Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> is beneath comparison with any one
+of his predecessors for the last 350 years in theological
+knowledge and intellectual cultivation generally. One
+must go back to Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi> and Julius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi> to find
+Popes of similar theological and scientific attainments.
+It is known here that, small as are the intellectual
+requisites for ordination in the Roman States, it was only
+out of special regard to his family that Giovanni Maria
+Mastai could get ordained priest. His subsequent
+career offered no opportunity or means for supplying
+this neglect, and thus he became Pope with the feeling
+of his entire deficiency in the necessary acquirements.
+This unpleasant consciousness naturally produced the
+idea that the defect would be remedied without effort
+on his part by enlightenment from above, and divine
+inspiration would supply the absence of human knowledge.
+This illusion has been and will be so common,
+that we need not have troubled ourselves about it, did
+it not threaten now to become a destructive firebrand.
+<pb n='503'/><anchor id='Pg503'/>
+The public letters which have passed of late between
+the assembled Fathers on the absorbing question of
+the day deserve attention. They show the deep gulf
+which divides the members of the Episcopate. There
+is Spalding, Archbishop of Baltimore, who first wanted
+to help the Pope to get his infallibility acknowledged
+indirectly by his now famous <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>postulatum</foreign>, where the real
+point was kept in the background, when he proposed a
+decree that every papal decision was to be received
+with unconditional inward assent. But now, in his
+letter to Dupanloup, he has changed his mind, and
+wants infallibility to be openly and explicitly defined.
+So again in the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>postulatum</foreign> he had declared moral
+unanimity to be necessary for a dogma, but now on the
+contrary he considers a mere majority of votes to be
+sufficient. Two other American Archbishops have
+come forward in opposition to him, Kenrick of St.
+Louis and Purcell of Cincinnati. They say that Spalding's
+letter has fallen among them like a bomb-shell; it
+has hitherto been their custom for such matters to be
+discussed in an assembly of the American Bishops, but
+that has not been done in the present case, and he has
+written his letter alone and without any communication
+with his colleagues. Indeed he had previously
+<pb n='504'/><anchor id='Pg504'/>
+advised them to oppose the definition of infallibility, as
+sure to produce nothing but difficulties, but now he
+has taken up just the opposite view, on what grounds
+they know not. The two prelates add that American
+Catholics have very special reasons for disliking the
+definition, for the notion of the Pope having the right
+to depose monarchs, dispense oaths of allegiance, and
+give away countries and nations at his will, is equally
+strange to Protestants and Catholics in their country.
+They think that Archbishop Spalding will find himself
+greatly embarrassed in America with his infallibilist
+doctrine, as has already been the case for some years
+with regard to the condemnation of religious freedom
+by the Syllabus. The two Archbishops, as one sees,
+tread lightly and cautiously. They are in Rome,&mdash;<q>incedunt
+per ignes suppositos cineri doloso.</q> Still they
+assert with American freedom of speech, <q>We, and
+several more of us, believe that the dogma contradicts
+the history and tradition of the Church.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The citizens of the United States, whether Protestant
+or Catholic, will certainly be astonished when the new
+dogma comes into full force among them and its consequences
+are brought to light, suddenly recalling a
+long series of papal decisions into active life;&mdash;when,
+<pb n='505'/><anchor id='Pg505'/>
+for instance, the recent Bull (<hi rend='italic'>Apostolicæ Sedis</hi>), with its
+many and various excommunications reserved to the
+Pope alone becomes known, and again the decision of
+the infallible Urban <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi> that it is no murder to kill an
+excommunicated man out of zeal for the Church, a
+decision which to this day stands on record in 200
+copies of the canon law. And as a commentary on
+this the work of the present Jesuit theologian of the
+Court of Rome, Schrader (<hi rend='italic'>De Unitate Romanâ</hi>), will
+be put into their hands, from which they will learn
+that the contents of all papal decrees are infallible, for
+they always contain some <q>doctrina veritatis</q>&mdash;whether
+moral, juridical, or rational&mdash;and the Pope is always infallible
+<q>in ordine veritatis et doctrinæ.</q> Yet that is
+but one flower from the dogmatic garden, into which
+Archbishop Spalding will introduce the citizens of the
+United States after infallibility is happily proclaimed.
+They will then also hear, among other interesting
+truths, that according to the irrefragable decision of Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi>
+every priest is absolutely free by divine and human law
+from all secular authority, and no layman has any right
+over him.<note place='foot'><q>Jure tam divino quam humano laicis nulla potestas in ecclesiasticas
+personas attributa est.</q></note> And they must be reminded, in order to
+<pb n='506'/><anchor id='Pg506'/>
+make them more submissive, that in 1493 Pope Alexander
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi> gave over their country with all its inhabitants,
+<q>in virtue of the plenitude of his apostolic power,</q> to
+the kings of Spain in the infallible Bull <hi rend='italic'>Inter cætera</hi>,<note place='foot'>See Raynald. <hi rend='italic'>Annal.</hi> xix. ann. 1493, 22.</note> and
+then drew the famous line from the North to the South
+Pole, which included whole provinces of the present
+United States in his great and generous gift. By virtue
+of papal infallibility they are subjects of the Spanish
+Government, and who knows if right and fact may not
+some day again coincide? <q>Res clamat ad dominum.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='507'/><anchor id='Pg507'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Forty-Fourth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, May 13, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The time for the most eventful
+decisions is come: to-morrow the debate on infallibility
+commences. The opponents of the dogma have
+taken every means to put off this decision, and now
+that they are foiled, enter upon the question with the
+greatest repugnance and a sense of being defeated
+by anticipation in the perilous contest. The diplomatists
+too, who had presented notes from their Governments
+to the Vatican or had been instructed to
+support the notes presented, made urgent representations
+that the existing order of business should not be
+departed from, so as to get the discussion of infallibility
+deferred. And then some Bishops made an attempt
+to move the Pope's conscience. They told him that
+by this undertaking he was sowing divisions among
+the faithful, shaking faith, preparing for the closing
+days of his life a terrible disillusionizing and bitter
+<pb n='508'/><anchor id='Pg508'/>
+reproaches, and kindling a fire which after blazing up
+in various parts of the Catholic world would turn into
+a frightful conflagration. He was urgently entreated
+to listen to some of the Bishops, who were in a position
+to inform him of the real state of things in different
+countries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There has unquestionably for some time past been a
+certain vacillation among the Pope's counsellors, but
+never for a moment did they think of giving up the
+whole enterprise, and confessing themselves defeated.
+And as it was clear that, if the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign> preceding the
+infallibility question were discussed in their regular
+order, the hot season would set in with its miasmas, and
+the inevitable prorogation of the Council would most
+seriously imperil the dogma, the resolve to proceed at
+once with the matter, regardless of consequences, prevailed
+in the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. The Opposition tried to hinder
+this intention by a solemn act. A deputation, consisting
+of several Bishops of different nations&mdash;a German,
+a Hungarian, and a Bohemian Bishop for Germany&mdash;was
+to be sent to the Pope, with Archbishop Purcell of
+Cincinnati for its spokesman, to make the most earnest
+and direct representations to him. From fear of this
+demonstration, and in order at once to cut off all hopes
+<pb n='509'/><anchor id='Pg509'/>
+placed upon it, the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> had the <hi rend='italic'>Synopsis Animadversionum</hi>
+distributed in great haste, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi> a selection from
+the Opinions of the Bishops, partly in favour of the
+dogma, partly against it. The opinions are about
+equally divided, but some represent more than one
+author. Thus <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi> 4 Hungarians and 16 Dominicans, in
+one case 24 Bishops, gave in the same Opinion. They
+are all printed without the names, but some of the
+writers are easily recognised, as <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi> Rauscher, Schwarzenberg,
+Fürstenberg, Krementz, Dupanloup, Clifford,
+Kenrick, etc. It is to be observed that some of these
+opinions are printed word for word, while others&mdash;of the
+Opposition Bishops&mdash;are cunningly tampered with, to
+the great disgust of their authors. But in most cases
+the reader cannot tell whether he has the opinion of a
+man of high position or of a nobody before him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In consequence of this rapid manœuvre of distributing
+the Synopsis, the Opposition did not think it well to
+send their deputation, which accordingly fell through.
+The dogmatic constitution on infallibility was known
+here on the 1st of May, but was not published for eight
+days afterwards. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> was evidently not yet
+quite clear about its tactics; perhaps the season might
+not appear sufficiently advanced, and they might feel
+<pb n='510'/><anchor id='Pg510'/>
+more secure of carrying their point when the heat had
+driven the foreign Bishops away and the Council was
+left to the Italian and Spanish rump.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The minority however did not cease to labour for the
+postponement of the infallibilist discussion. The certainty
+that the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> would be in earnest about it
+gave them somewhat more energy than they had shown
+in the debate on the Little Catechism. The voting on
+it on May 4 had been quite unexpected. For it had
+been resolved that the amendments modifying the text
+should first be voted on, and the whole text be decided
+afterwards, when printed and brought forward in the
+definitive form it had received through the voting on
+the amendments. But instead of that, amendments and
+text were voted upon on the same day, so that many
+Bishops&mdash;including Darboy and Kenrick&mdash;were absent,
+and the whole number of <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>non-placets</foreign> and conditional
+votes together did not reach 100. This voting on May 4
+was however provisional; the definitive voting takes
+place to-day, Friday, May 13. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> of course
+does not wish to have so considerable an Opposition
+left, and has therefore somewhat altered the text, but
+not in their sense. All the German Bishops of the
+minority, amounting to about 40, will vote <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>,
+<pb n='511'/><anchor id='Pg511'/>
+as I hear, and the French also, with a single exception,
+making some 30 more. Several others will join them,
+so that the previous 56 <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non-placets</foreign> will be augmented
+by most of the 44 prelates who voted <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta
+modum</foreign>. The opposition to the Little Catechism may
+thus reach 100 votes, and will certainly exceed 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One might be tempted to ask why the Opposition,
+when it is so numerous, has no confidence of victory
+and is always shrinking from decisive measures. It is
+idle to suppose that the cancerous ulcer of infallibilism
+can ever be once for all cut out of the body of the
+Church, except by a scientific demonstration of its
+falsehood, or its adherents subdued without a decisive
+contest. This uneasy attitude of the minority arises
+from the want of sympathy and confidence among its
+various elements. The inopportunists are afraid of
+their allies not only hindering the definition but undermining
+belief in the doctrine and upsetting the whole
+Jesuitical system and school of lies, and thus exposing
+the contrast between the primacy as Christ founded it
+and as it has since been perverted. And the others
+judge from what they themselves say that their resistance
+will not be firm and persevering, and that they
+already think of yielding sooner or later. And even for
+<pb n='512'/><anchor id='Pg512'/>
+those who hold the doctrine to be thoroughly false and
+unecclesiastical, it is much more convenient not to proclaim
+their conviction so roundly and maintain the
+opposition at all hazards, after the Pope has solemnly and
+formally committed himself and done all in his power to
+get the dogma defined and all condemned who reject it.
+For all who openly declared the doctrine to be an error
+would be declaring the Pope to be an innovator; and he
+must appear to every decided opponent of infallibilism
+no common innovator either, like any <q>doctor privatus,</q>
+but the most fearful and dangerous enemy of revealed
+truth and the pure doctrine of the Church, since he
+abuses his supreme authority to impose a false doctrine
+on consciences by terrorism, anathema and excommunication.
+But it is too much to demand of the Bishops
+to express such judgments, or give occasion for such
+conclusions and alternatives. While they wish to hold
+aloof from so tremendous a conflict, it is their interest
+to avoid a collision which must involve such considerations.
+The more many of them are ensnared in the
+delusion of the present papal system, the more vivid
+is their desire not to be forced into so public and
+decisive an announcement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is exactly those Bishops who are not the strongest
+<pb n='513'/><anchor id='Pg513'/>
+dogmatically who display the most zeal in hindering
+the discussion on infallibility, and they have done a
+good deal to rehabilitate a force capable of resistance
+even after the abject surrender of April 24. This
+fact shows how little the astute and practised Roman
+Court has succeeded in gaining over the Fathers
+separately. The Hungarian primate notoriously signed
+the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>postulatum</foreign> against infallibility with reluctance, and
+he has since openly adhered to the majority as spokesman
+of the Deputation <hi rend='italic'>de Fide</hi>, after he had previously
+retired from the assembly of German Opposition
+Bishops. He has a good right to reckon confidently on
+a Cardinal's Hat; and yet it is known that he, like
+almost all the Hungarians, will come forward to oppose
+the definition, and will probably speak against it to-morrow.
+Ginoulhiac, Bishop of Grenoble, who is perhaps
+the most learned Bishop in France, after Maret,
+though his learning is of a somewhat narrow and old-fashioned
+kind, is by nature and education one of those
+who are anxious to find some middle way, by which
+they may at once bow to authority and escape the consequences
+of an inexorable logic. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> has long
+believed his theologian's heart could be won by well-selected
+citations, but other means have been also
+<pb n='514'/><anchor id='Pg514'/>
+employed. After he had been named to the Archbishopric
+of Lyons, the Pope refused him the desired
+audience and also the preconisation, so that the diocese
+will have to remain many months without a chief pastor.
+But he continued firm, and took part in the compilation
+of a document, which might well become the most
+important in its results of all the declarations of the
+Opposition. The Bishop of Mayence was predisposed
+by all his sympathies and antipathies to support the
+cause of Rome in this Council, and he has often, as well
+at Fulda as here, repudiated the notion that the Pope's
+claim to infallibility is an encroachment on the divine
+prerogatives. For a time he was a drag on his colleagues,
+but the policy of the Court and its treatment
+of the Opposition has more and more alienated him
+from the curialists; so that from seeming at first in
+Roman eyes to be divided by an immeasurable gulf
+from men like Dupanloup, he has become a powerful
+influence in the minority. The pamphlet on infallibility,
+written at his suggestion, and addressed from
+Solothurn to the Bishops, showed his changed attitude.
+This publication is well known to have been for a time
+kept back, and it was only after a contest of some
+weeks with the authorities that he succeeded in getting
+<pb n='515'/><anchor id='Pg515'/>
+it issued. As the contemporaneous writings of Rauscher,
+Schwarzenberg and Hefele met with no particular
+opposition, this hostile treatment of Ketteler was
+ascribed to the belief that the greater sharpness of the
+German protest against the order of business, as compared
+with the French, was due to him. Where the
+French text speaks of the Bishops as representing the
+Churches, the Germans added the remark that this was
+the more important to insist upon in the case of the
+Vatican Council, where so many Bishops were admitted
+to vote, whose claim to vote by divine right was doubtful.<note place='foot'><q>Hæc conditio pro Concilio Vaticano eo magis urgenda esse videtur,
+cum ad ferenda suffragia tot Patres admissi sunt, de quibus non constat
+evidenter, utrum jure tantum ecclesiastico an etiam jure divino ipsis
+votum decisivum competat.</q></note>
+This historical consideration has since been urged
+with great effect by Kenrick, whose decisive weight in
+fixing the value of the Vatican Council will only be
+known later. It was universally believed that Ketteler
+had co-operated in getting this passage inserted in the
+German Protest, and so one is not surprised that he
+should have taken a leading part in the last move of
+the Opposition. To-day a declaration, signed by 77
+Fathers, has been presented to the Presidents, protesting
+energetically against the inversion of the established
+<pb n='516'/><anchor id='Pg516'/>
+order in the interests of infallibility. It contains the
+severe remark that they well know no answer can be
+expected, but they are unwilling to let any doubts be
+cast on the freedom of the Council, and to have the
+Bishops made a public laughing-stock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They cannot take much by this move. The arguments
+against inverting the purely arbitrary order of
+business, previously introduced, are weak in comparison
+with the objections to the definition on principle, and
+to insist on them is simply beating the air. The majority
+only see proofs of their weakness and grounds for
+increased confidence in the obstinate holding aloof of the
+Opposition from the main question, and in the fact that
+men who are not real assailants of the dogma play a prominent
+part in its proceedings. Wherever there has been
+any talk of hesitation, it has been only in the Vatican
+and the Commission <hi rend='italic'>de Fide</hi>, never among the mass of
+the party. Pius may for a moment have shared the
+scruples suggested to him by two of the Legates, and
+the Deputation may have believed that the dogma
+could be established without any violent precipitation,
+and regretted the indecent zeal of the French, but the
+ardent infallibilists&mdash;French, English, Belgian, Swiss,
+etc.&mdash;have never slackened in their confidence or their
+<pb n='517'/><anchor id='Pg517'/>
+assiduity. They still affirm, as they ever have done,
+that infallibility has no real opponents or hardly any,
+and that the leading members of the Opposition privately
+hold the view or at least have never openly
+rejected it; there are but few even among the <foreign rend='italic'>Animadversiones</foreign>
+which deny the admissibility of the definition.
+So they think that there is a bait for every
+one of these troublers of peace, and that they can all
+either be won over by concessions or frightened into
+submission. The example of the Prince Bishop of
+Breslau, who is known to have suspended a priest for
+attacking the doctrines of the Syllabus, is very interesting
+in this point of view. If the Pope were to issue a
+Bull condemning the opponents of his infallibility, and
+to deal in the same way or&mdash;as he easily might&mdash;more
+solemnly and harshly with other doctrines than the
+Encyclical of 1864, Prince Bishop Förster would at least
+punish all malcontents as severely as he punished the
+contemner of the Syllabus.<note place='foot'>It appears from a passage in Letter <ref target='Letter_LII'>lii.</ref> that this severe judgment on
+the Prince Bishop was based on an erroneous report of his conduct in the
+papers.</note> Yet in spite of all this, he
+is a member of the Opposition, and the majority believe
+it would probably soon melt away, if the Pope could
+resolve on adopting this policy. Moreover their leaders
+<pb n='518'/><anchor id='Pg518'/>
+speak as though the Opposition had already incurred
+censures. They expect to make short work with the
+German Bishops who signed the Fulda Pastoral. In
+that document it is said, <q>The Holy Father is accused
+of acting under the influence of a party, and desiring
+to use the Council simply as a means of unduly exalting
+the power of the Apostolic See, changing the
+ancient and genuine constitution of the Church, and
+setting up a spiritual domination incompatible with
+Christian liberty. Men do not scruple to apply party
+names to the head of the Church and to the Episcopate,
+which hitherto we have been accustomed to hear only
+from the lips of professed enemies of the Church.
+And they plainly avow their suspicion that the Bishops
+will not be allowed full freedom of deliberation, and
+will themselves be deficient in the knowledge and
+straightforwardness requisite for the discharge of their
+duties in Council. And they accordingly call in
+question the validity of the Council and its decrees.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here in Rome the Bishops have to listen to these
+and similar observations <foreign rend='italic'>usque ad nauseam</foreign>, which
+their adversaries use only to remind them of this
+Pastoral. While denying before the world that the
+definition of infallibility was the object of the Council,
+<pb n='519'/><anchor id='Pg519'/>
+or was intended at all by the holy Father, they at the
+same time wrote to Rome to deprecate it, being perfectly
+well acquainted with the designs of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>,
+and corresponded with friendly prelates on the means
+of averting it. And thus the other party may now say
+to them, <q>You acknowledge yourselves that the unity
+and strength of the Church is to be preferred to strict
+veracity, and that in so sacred a cause some measure of
+deception is allowable. Don't choose then to be better
+than your neighbours. You have already abandoned
+the ground of objective truth, and you may as well
+come over to us altogether.</q> But the chief means of
+breaking the Opposition consists in the Pope's making
+the Bishops feel the full weight of his authority and
+compromising himself yet more deeply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> has succeeded in setting aside the attempted
+intervention of the Governments, and the
+battle will have to be fought out, as is fitting, by the
+Bishops themselves. In the mind of the majority it is
+already over; the Deputation has issued a reply to the
+objections of the minority, which deserves the most
+careful attention of the theological world. It contains
+a flat denial of the force of historical evidence, and
+closes with a repudiation of the necessity of moral
+<pb n='520'/><anchor id='Pg520'/>
+unanimity.<note place='foot'><q>Jamvero infallibilitatem S. Ap. Sedis et Romani Pontificis ad doctrinam
+fidei pertinere ex allatis fidei documentis constat, et contrariæ illi
+sententiæ a magisterio Ecclesiæ non semel fuerunt improbatæ. Cujuscunque
+ergo scientiæ etiam historiæ ecclesiasticæ conclusiones Rom. Pontificum
+infallibilitati adversantes, quo manifestius hæc ex revelationis
+fontibus infertur, eo certius veluti totidem errores habendas esse consequitur.</q></note> This points out the road which the loyal
+Bishops of the Opposition must follow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Postscript.</hi>&mdash;I have just heard that the definitive
+voting on the Little Catechism, which was announced
+for to-day's sitting, has not taken place. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+had discovered that the German and French Opposition
+Bishops would vote <foreign rend='italic'>en masse</foreign> against it. No regard had
+been paid to the representations and objections of those
+who voted <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta modum</foreign> on May 4, and accordingly this
+stronger resistance was foreseen, and the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> shrank
+from appealing to a new vote. Matters remain as the
+voting of May 4 left them, and it is hoped that before
+the next Solemn Session the minority will be split up
+by a more important controversy.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='521'/><anchor id='Pg521'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Forty-Fifth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, May 14, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The sitting of May 4 requires
+a more particular mention which shall be added here.
+The reporter on the scheme of the Catechism was
+Zwerger, Bishop of Seckau, who is a special favourite
+of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>,&mdash;forming as he does with the Tyrolese
+Rudigier and Fessler the little party of Austrian infallibilists,&mdash;a
+youthful and elegant prelate, whose
+Latin is seasoned with such terms as <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>portraitus</foreign>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>præcautionibus</foreign>,
+etc. He gave the consoling assurance that
+the new Catechism should be compiled by a Commission
+of Bishops named by the Pope, so that it might be
+<q>omnibus numeris absolutus.</q> He added that unfortunately
+he could not introduce this masterpiece into his
+own diocese, but he would in principle vote for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The question of the Catechism is of course closely
+connected with that of infallibilism. For first the
+<pb n='522'/><anchor id='Pg522'/>
+Catechism will quickly and strongly inoculate the
+rising generation with the dogma, and secondly, as
+being a papal text-book, it will familiarize all the
+young from an early age with the notion, that in religion
+everything emanates from the Pope, depends on
+him and refers to him. Thus every one will be taught
+that not only all rights, as Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi> said, but all
+religious and moral truths, are drawn forth by the Pope
+from the recesses of his own breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The notion is excellent, and does infinite honour to
+the Jesuits who invented it. It is like the egg of
+Columbus. One cannot think at first how it did not
+occur centuries ago to the astute members of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>.
+But to begin with, it would have been impossible earlier
+to fit this catechetical strait-waistcoat on such a Church
+as was the French; and then again a sufficient motive
+was wanting, for it is four centuries since any Pope
+thought of introducing new dogmas into the Church.
+The whole history of the Church offers but three examples
+of it. The first was the attempt of Gregory
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi> and Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> to alter the doctrine hitherto
+prevalent on the relations of Church and State, and to
+substitute the new doctrine of the Pope's divine right
+to exercise temporal sovereignty over princes and
+<pb n='523'/><anchor id='Pg523'/>
+peoples. This did not succeed. The second instance
+was the attempt made from the thirteenth century
+downwards by the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and especially by the Jesuits,&mdash;for
+which a long series of forgeries and fictions paved
+the way,&mdash;to replace the primacy of the ancient Church
+by something totally different, viz., an absolute monarchy,
+so as to destroy the power and authority of the
+Episcopate, reduce the Bishops to mere delegates or
+commissioners of the Pope, and erect him into the irresponsible
+master of the whole Church and all its
+members, the sole source of all ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
+This scheme too was wrecked on the opposition,
+first of the great Councils, and afterwards of the French
+Church. The third attempt, to make all Popes infallible
+and thus establish the sole and universal monarchy
+of the Pope, is now going on. And as the teaching of
+the Church has to be altered and enriched with new
+dogmas, the Jesuits who inspire the Pope have quite
+rightly perceived that a Catechism clothed with
+supreme authority, such as never previously existed,
+must be introduced throughout the whole Catholic
+world. This undertaking promises special advantages
+to the Jesuit Order, and so it has been brought before
+the Council, and forced rapidly and unexpectedly to
+<pb n='524'/><anchor id='Pg524'/>
+the vote. So little had it been anticipated, that over
+100 of the Bishops in Rome were absent. Another
+attempt was made in this <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> to get papal infallibility
+accepted by a side-wind, by inserting a statement
+that the whole teaching office of the Church resided in
+the primacy, to the exclusion of the Bishops. It was
+felt at once that this would give the Pope a position
+and authority incompatible with any other, even that of
+the Church herself, and that the Bishops would entirely
+lose their judicial office in matters of doctrine. Partly
+on account of this passage, and partly on general
+grounds, 57 Bishops voted <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>, among whom
+were Cardinals Schwarzenberg and Rauscher, Archbishops
+Scherr and Deinlein, and Bishops Dinkel and
+Hefele. It created a great sensation that Cardinal
+Mathieu, Archbishop of Besançon, also voted against it.
+He has only lately returned from his Easter visit to
+France, and is said now to belong decidedly to the
+minority. Among the 24 Bishops who voted <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta
+modum</foreign>, were the Archbishops of Cologne and Salzburg,
+and the Bishop of Mayence. An interval of two days
+was given them to put into shape the condition on
+which they wanted to make their vote dependent.
+But we have already seen that, when the time was
+<pb n='525'/><anchor id='Pg525'/>
+come, the Legates preferred not calling for any definitive
+vote.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Are we to infer from the collapse of so weighty and
+pregnant a question as this of the Catechism that
+henceforth everything will be settled much quicker?
+I cannot say. But as early as January 22 the Pope
+declared, in a Brief addressed to M. de Ségur, that the
+delay in the proceedings of the Council was due to the
+powers of Hell, for as it was to inflict on them their
+inevitable death-blow, they wished to protract it as
+long as they could. Pius is persuaded that, as soon as
+the Council produces its fruits, all faults and vices will
+at once disappear from human society, and all who are
+in error be led into the truth. That is expressly stated
+in the Brief; and these are no mere phrases, such as
+the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> frequently indulges in, but are uttered in
+sober earnest. Pius really holds his infallibility to be
+the divinely ordained panacea for effecting a thorough
+cure of mankind, who are now sick unto death. He is
+convinced that the fount of unerring inspiration, which
+will henceforth flow incessantly from the holy Father at
+Rome, will fructify all Christian lands like a supernatural
+Nile stream, and overflow all human science for
+its purification or its destruction. The Jesuits make
+<pb n='526'/><anchor id='Pg526'/>
+the decrees, who are not indeed themselves infallible,
+but whose compositions, directly the Pope has signed
+his name to them, become inspired and free from every
+breath of error.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The psychological enigma presented by Pius can only
+be solved by looking steadily at the two root-ideas,
+which interpenetrate and supplement one another in his
+mind. There is first his belief in the objective infallibility
+of his 256 predecessors, and next his belief that
+he, Mastai, has through continual invocation and worship
+of the Madonna attained to an inspiration and
+divine illumination of which she is the medium. This
+last privilege is in his eyes, as all about him know and
+occasionally say, a purely personal one, which his predecessors
+did not all experience. But it strengthens
+his faith in infallibilism, and&mdash;which is the main point&mdash;he
+is certain by virtue of this infused illumination
+that he is God's chosen instrument for introducing the
+dogma. And this higher certainty naturally leads him
+to regard the opposing Bishops as unhappy men snared
+in the meshes of a fatal error, who rebel in their sinful
+blindness against the counsel of God, and will be
+dragged at the chariot-wheels of the triumphal car of
+the infallible Papacy in its resistless progress, like boys
+<pb n='527'/><anchor id='Pg527'/>
+hanging on behind, in spite of their efforts to pull it
+back. And therefore sharp rebukes&mdash;<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>verbera verborum</foreign>&mdash;must
+not be spared these episcopal opponents. Pius
+knows that the German and American members of the
+party are infected by the atmosphere of Protestantism,
+and the French by that of infidelity, so that they are
+suffering at least under a violent heterodox influenza,
+and require drastic remedies. But no one had imagined
+that all regard for decency would be so completely laid
+aside, and that the Pope would so far forget his high
+position as to actually descend into the arena, deal
+blows with his own hand, and assail all disputants with
+bitter and insulting words, as he has in fact done. He
+might have waited quietly till his unconditional majority
+of 500 had voted the dogma, and then have fulminated
+to his heart's content the plenitude of anathemas and
+curses at the still unbelieving <q>filii perditionis</q> and
+<q>iniquitatis alumni,</q> in the forms that are stored up
+ready for use in the Roman Chancery. But he is too
+impatient to wait for the decision, and exhausts all the
+weapons in his quiver by anticipation. When the
+Bishops of the minority presented their first remonstrance
+against the new dogma, he had it announced in
+his journals that it was only from the lofty impartiality
+<pb n='528'/><anchor id='Pg528'/>
+which became him that he had not received their
+memorial, as neither had he received those of the other
+party. But now this mask is dropped, and no means
+are omitted for overreaching or intimidating the minority.
+It is confidently expected that fear and discouragement
+will soon do their work in splitting up the
+Opposition. Many of its members recoil in alarm
+from the position they will be placed in by persevering
+to the last. It needs more than ordinary episcopal
+courage, it needs a deep conscientiousness and faith
+firm as a rock in the ultimate victory of the true
+doctrine of the ancient Church, to confront in open
+fight the triple host of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, the Jesuits and the
+ultramontanes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now for the first time the excellence of the
+Council Hall is proved, and the wise foresight of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> in choosing it and adhering to it with the firmness
+of old Romans in spite of all entreaties and representations
+to the contrary. It is precisely adapted to the
+present tactics of the majority. The Bishops will
+occupy a number of sittings with speeches, generally
+read, seldom spoken, which four-fifths of their auditors,
+as before, neither understand nor wish to understand.
+For the majority know everything already, they are
+<pb n='529'/><anchor id='Pg529'/>
+armed with a triple breastplate, and have their short
+and powerful watchword, which renders them invincible.
+Those who frequent infallibilist circles here may hear
+St. Augustine's saying quoted ten times a day, <q>Roma
+locuta est, causa finita est,</q> or St. Ambrose's <q>Ubi
+Petrus, ibi Ecclesia,</q> or that St. Irenæus said every
+one must necessarily agree with the Roman Church.
+These are mere fables; Augustine and Irenæus said
+nothing of the kind, but something quite different; and
+while Ambrose did indeed use the words, it was without
+the remotest reference to the Pope and his infallibility.
+But the words are quoted in a hundred books
+and pamphlets, and are used like theological revolvers
+which never miss fire. And then Mermillod will repeat
+in the Council what he lately said in a sermon here
+about the threefold manifestation of God in the crib of
+Bethlehem, in the Sacrament of the Altar, and&mdash;in the
+Vatican. Pie of Poitiers will utter some of those bold
+Oriental metaphors, which all France laughs at but
+which are gravely received in the Council Hall. Manning
+will commend infallibility as the one plank of safety
+for mankind who are sinking in the shipwreck of scepticism,
+while he sings a pæan over the triumph of the
+dogma over history. There will be room even for some
+<pb n='530'/><anchor id='Pg530'/>
+flashes of genius from the German infallibilists, the
+Tyrolese and the three Bavarians, if they can resolve on
+opening their lips hitherto so firmly closed. And then
+the African heat and sultry atmosphere, drying up the
+brain, which have already begun to press on Rome like
+a leaden pall, will come in to expedite the close. The
+majority will avail themselves of the right the Pope
+has conferred on them to break off abruptly the discussion,
+in which nothing has been discussed, and the
+Pope will appear in a Solemn Session, in the full pomp
+of the earthly representative of Christ, to proclaim with
+infallible certainty his own infallibility and that of all
+his predecessors and successors, <q>approbante Concilio.</q>
+And thus will he enter on his new empire of the world;
+for he will then for the first time be the acknowledged
+master and sole teacher of mankind; before, he was
+only a pretender. The Bishops will bow their heads
+reverently under a profound sense of their own fallibility
+before the one divinely enlightened man, and the world
+will go to sleep to wake next morning enriched and
+blessed with the new and fundamental article of faith.
+The day of the promulgation will be a great day of
+creation. <q>God said, Let there be light, and there
+was light, and the evening and the morning were the
+<pb n='531'/><anchor id='Pg531'/>
+first day</q> of the new Church, after the old Church for
+1869 years had been unable to ascertain and formulize
+its chief article of faith. For the Popes were always
+infallible; <q>the light appeared in the darkness, and
+the darkness comprehended it not.</q> From the Pentecost
+of the blessed year 1870, as Manning has prophesied,
+dates the age of the Holy Ghost, and the
+Church is for the first time really complete. As the
+Pentecost of the year 33 was the birthday of the ancient
+Church, so will the Pentecost of 1870 be the birthday
+of the new and infinitely more enlightened Church.
+Nearly all commentators now assume that the seven
+days of creation in Genesis are not seven ordinary days,
+but signify a great period of the world's history. It
+cannot then be taken ill if the Church, instead of distinctly
+putting forward her principal dogma on the first
+Pentecost, which would certainly have been the most
+natural course, should have waited nineteen centuries
+in the vain attempt to ascertain and formulate it, and
+have only now hatched the egg in the year 1870.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='532'/><anchor id='Pg532'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<anchor id='Letter_XLVI'/>
+<head>Forty-Sixth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, May 15, 1870.</hi>&mdash;Yesterday the discussion of
+the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on the Primacy began, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, speeches were
+delivered for and against infallibility, for any regular
+discussion is of course impossible in the Council Hall.
+The Hall is really more patient than the proverbially
+patient paper, as long as the majority do not get excited.
+Things can be said there which would not be allowed
+to be written, still less printed. The names of 69
+Bishops are inscribed to speak. Bishop Pie of Poitiers
+had already the day before, as reporter of the Deputation,
+exceeded the expectations generally formed of
+him. He had discovered a wholly new argument, to
+which he gave utterance with evident self-complacency.
+The Pope, he said, must be infallible, because Peter
+was crucified head downwards. As the head bears the
+whole weight of the body, so the Pope, as head, bears
+the whole Church; but he is infallible who bears, not
+<pb n='533'/><anchor id='Pg533'/>
+he who is borne.&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>Q.E.D.</hi> The Italians and Spaniards
+applauded enthusiastically. On the 14th Cardinal
+Patrizzi spoke. The Pope, he observed, certainly
+claims personal infallibility, but he does not therefore
+wish nor is he obliged to separate himself from the
+Episcopate. Certainly not, thought the minority, since
+we must all assent to that claim of the infallible, so
+that he cannot separate himself from us Bishops or shake
+us off if he wished it. Bishop Rivet of Dijon carried off
+the honours of the day among the Opposition. Bishop
+Ranolder of Vesprim referred briefly but forcibly to the
+dangers into which the new dogma would plunge the
+Hungarian Church. Dreux Brézé, who followed worthily
+in the footsteps of Pie, was this time eclipsed by a
+Sicilian prelate, who said that the Sicilians had a reason
+peculiar to themselves for believing the infallibility of
+all the Popes. It is well known that Peter preached
+in that island, where he found a number of Christians;
+but when he told them that he was infallible, they
+thought this article of faith, which they had never
+been taught, a strange one. In order to get at the
+truth about it, they sent an embassy to the Virgin
+Mary, to ask if she had heard of Peter's infallibility, to
+which she replied that she certainly remembered being
+<pb n='534'/><anchor id='Pg534'/>
+present, when her Son conferred this special prerogative
+on him. This testimony fully satisfied the Sicilians,
+who have ever since preserved in their hearts
+faith in infallibility. This speech was really delivered
+in the Council Hall on May 14. The Opposition
+Bishops see a proof of the insolent contempt of the
+majority in their putting up such men as Pie and this
+Sicilian to speak against them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sicily is truly the land where faith removes mountains,
+and Pius would find himself among his most
+genuine spiritual children if he went to Messina.
+There the letter is still preserved, which the Virgin
+Mary addressed to the inhabitants and let fall from
+heaven, and the feast of the <hi rend='italic'>Sacra Lettera</hi> is annually
+observed with the full approval of the Roman Congregation
+of Rites, when the excited populace shout in the
+streets <q>Viva la Sacra Lettera.</q> The Jesuit Inchover
+has written a book to prove its authenticity to demonstration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A great many copies of the remarkable pamphlet
+<hi rend='italic'>Ce qui se passe au Concile</hi> have been secretly disseminated&mdash;the
+Government naturally wants to suppress it&mdash;and
+it is eagerly read. I have learnt from a Frenchman
+that Pius himself has read some pages, on which
+<pb n='535'/><anchor id='Pg535'/>
+he observed, <q>C'est mal, c'est très-mal, excessivement
+mal.</q> It is clear that the author has himself collected
+his notices in Rome. If its revelations show how every
+usage of former Councils has been reversed and all true
+freedom carefully destroyed, a further evidence of this
+is supplied by the statement of the official <hi rend='italic'>Giornale di
+Roma</hi> about the departure of the Americans, where the
+Bishops are plainly reminded that they are liable to
+arrest, and that any of them who quit Rome without
+leave incur heavy censures. A German Archbishop,
+who had an audience of the Pope to-day, took the
+opportunity of speaking to him about the universal
+aversion and resistance of the Germans to the infallibilist
+dogma. It made not the slightest impression.
+Pius answered: <q>I know these Germans of old, who
+choose to know best about everything; every one
+wants to be Bishop and Pope.</q> Yet it is notorious
+that he does not understand a word of German, and
+has never been in Germany or read a German book,
+even in a translation. But he reads Veuillot and Margotti,
+and hears the Jesuits at least three times a week.
+Meanwhile the Protest drawn up by Ketteler against
+the arbitrary change of the order of business was presented
+on the 12th of March with 72 signatures. It
+<pb n='536'/><anchor id='Pg536'/>
+contains, as I said before, the words: <q>We know well
+that we shall receive no answer to this any more than
+to our former memorials.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All German Catholics count here for half Protestants.
+A German must here give special evidence of his
+orthodoxy, I do not say before he is trusted, but
+before he is reckoned a Catholic at all by the side of
+Spaniards and Italians. Above all is German theology
+in ill repute, and the mere word <q>history</q> in the
+mouth of a German acts like a red handkerchief on
+certain animals. The good times are gone by when
+Germany was considered the classical land of obedience
+in comparison with France, so copious was the influx
+of Peter's pence, the Jesuits, on whom the chief hopes
+are centred, have effected very little here except in
+Westphalia and the Tyrol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is hard for the Bishops, even after a five months'
+experience, to comprehend the rôle assigned them, and
+to understand that they have only been summoned to
+receive commands, to obey, and to do service. It is a
+saying current among the Monsignori that the Bishops
+are nothing but servants of the Pope. <q>Just consider
+the monstrosity,</q> said one of the youngest but most
+actively employed of the Cardinals to a French priest,
+<pb n='537'/><anchor id='Pg537'/>
+when the famous letter of censure addressed by the
+Pope to the Archbishop of Paris appeared in the newspapers,
+<q>this Archbishop dares to speak of rights
+which belong to him! What would you say if one of
+your lackeys were to talk of his rights, when you gave
+him your orders?</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='538'/><anchor id='Pg538'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Forty-Seventh Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, May 16, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The Bishops of the minority
+want to bind themselves by subscribing an agreement
+to vote for no formula which contains the personal infallibility
+of the Pope. A calculation emanating from
+them has been shown me, according to which the
+strength of the Opposition is undiminished, or rather
+increased. It enumerates 43 Germans and Hungarians,
+40 North Americans, 29 French, 4 Portuguese, and 10
+Italians. The number of Bishops from the United States
+who are considered to be trustworthy is especially
+worthy of notice. They have been greatly influenced
+by the recent publications of the Bishops, and particularly
+by the excellent work of Archbishop Kenrick of
+St. Louis. When they first came to Rome they were
+nearly all inclined to the new dogma, but here their
+eyes have been gradually opened. The insolent and
+<pb n='539'/><anchor id='Pg539'/>
+despotic treatment of the Bishops, the spectacle of adulation
+exhibited by persons who call themselves successors
+of the Apostles, and the lamentable sophistry employed
+in torturing historical facts&mdash;as <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi> the case of
+Honorius&mdash;all this has gradually filled these Republicans
+with disgust and aversion, and driven them to the
+opposite side. But clearly what has chiefly influenced
+them has been the conviction produced by the controversy
+that, if they take home with them the new dogma
+of the Pope's political supremacy over all States, they
+will be exposed to the contempt and hatred of all
+educated America. And as many of them are Irishmen
+by birth, they have been reminded that, as Alexander
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi> gave the American peoples to Spain, so Adrian <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>
+gave Ireland to the King of England and thereby
+brought misery on the emerald isle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Bishops of the Opposition know how to appreciate
+the strength and numerical preponderance of their
+rivals; they know too that, besides a cool calculation
+and passive subjection to the commands of their
+<q>lord,</q> a certain enthusiasm and confidence also prevail
+among their ranks. There are first the numerous
+missionary Bishops and Vicars-Apostolic, who must
+certainly vote as they are told, for they are entirely in
+<pb n='540'/><anchor id='Pg540'/>
+the power of the Propaganda, and Cardinal Barnabo is
+an inexorably strict master: the Orientals have experienced
+that. And moreover the Bishops engaged in
+converting the heathen say, <q>How conveniently the new
+dogma will simplify and facilitate our work with
+Negroes, Kaffirs, New-Zealanders, etc.! We have
+hitherto had to refer them to the Church, of whose
+nature and authority we could only impress a dim conception
+on their minds with much time and trouble.
+Henceforth we shall tell them that God inspires one
+man in Rome with all truth, from whom all others
+receive it. That is short, simple, and what a child can
+understand.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the main strength of the papal army consists in
+the 120 Bishops from the kingdom of Italy with the
+the exception of 10, the 143 from the States of the
+Church, and the 120 titular Bishops without subjects or
+dioceses, most of them created by the present Pope,
+who represent nobody but themselves, or rather him
+who has raised them from the dust and set mitres on
+their heads. That makes altogether 373 Italians. This
+chosen band will remain here patiently through the heat
+so unendurable to the Northern Bishops, and the question
+has been already mooted in the Vatican, as I hear
+<pb n='541'/><anchor id='Pg541'/>
+from the mouth of one who is in its confidence, whether
+it would not be best to protract the affair and defer the
+final voting till these recalcitrant Northerners have
+obtained the permission which will be readily accorded
+them to flee from the heat and fevers, after which the
+Italian and Spanish prelates would vote the darling dogma
+with conspicuous unanimity. The idea deserves to be
+preferred to another, which is also under consideration.
+The Pope might issue a Bull defining that the moral
+unanimity, which has been so much talked of, is not
+necessary for Councils in voting articles of faith, and
+that a simple majority is sufficient. For it is thought
+that most of the minority Bishops, especially the inopportunists,
+would not dare to resist the new papal
+definition, and would thus be compelled at last to
+succumb to the infallibilist decree. We shall soon see.
+You may gather what the leaders of the minority think
+of the situation from a remark of Cardinal Mathieu's,
+<q>On veut jeter l'Église dans l'abîme, nous y jeterons
+plutôt nos cadavres.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two Bavarian Bishops, Stahl and Leonrod, have
+thought fit after two months to make a public demonstration
+of their assent to Bishop Räss's condemnation
+of Gratry. The explanation accepted here is that, after
+<pb n='542'/><anchor id='Pg542'/>
+the Bavarian note had been presented, the authorities
+wished the Bavarian Bishops to make an adverse move
+on the conciliar chess-board; and as these two prelates
+would not openly contradict their King, the expedient
+of a very late adhesion to the effusions of the Bishop of
+Strasburg was chosen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is commonly assumed that all the Cardinals are
+infallibilists as a matter of course, and the more so as
+this is at bottom the only doctrine which may be said
+to have been exclusively invented and built up by men
+who either were already or were soon about to become
+Cardinals. Still this is not quite the case. Apart
+from the non-resident Cardinals, Rauscher, Schwarzenberg
+and Mathieu, there are some among the residents
+who would gladly be dispensed from voting for the new
+foundation article of faith on which the whole edifice
+is henceforth to rest. But one of them said to-day,
+<q>We shall ruin our position, lose all influence, and
+become the mark of endless attacks. And as every
+one here has some weak and vulnerable point in his
+past life, he dare not expose himself to these fatal assaults
+on his character and honour from which there would be
+no escape.</q> At the same time the Cardinal admitted that
+the whole College has so lost its influence and become
+<pb n='543'/><anchor id='Pg543'/>
+so insignificant, that for six months the Pope has not
+once assembled them. Antonelli and a few favourites,
+with the Jesuits of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, are the people who
+now construct the history of the world and the
+Church.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='544'/><anchor id='Pg544'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Forty-Eighth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, May 20, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The first week of the great
+debate is drawing to a close. The Archbishops of
+Vienna, Prague, Gran, Paris, Antioch and Tuam have
+spoken against the infallibilist definition. So much is
+gained; the Catholic world knows that it is represented
+in Council, while the Court party is robbed of some
+illusions about the strength of the resistance to be
+looked for. The only fruit of its better knowledge as
+yet observable is seen in an increased obstinacy and
+a greater insolence of tone. The Commission has
+already declared by anticipation, in its reply to the
+remarks of the Bishops against the dogma, that the
+denial of infallibility is condemned under pain of censure,
+and scientific arguments are no longer available.
+The giving out of this watchword does excellent service
+to the majority, who are very shy of theological arguments
+and treat their opponents as heretics. That
+<pb n='545'/><anchor id='Pg545'/>
+far-famed courtesy, which has hitherto been an ornament
+if not exactly a real excellence of Rome, has
+greatly diminished, and the hypocrisy so long spun out
+has disappeared; it has become necessary to recognise
+the broad gulf which divides parties. And this has
+produced a tendency on the side of the Court and the
+majority to push their claims to the extremest point, to
+play for high stakes, and hold out no prospect of concessions
+beforehand. The minority is in their eyes not
+a power to be negotiated with but a gang of insolent
+mutineers to be put down. The mass of the majority
+have carried their leaders with them, and only passion
+now prevails in that camp. But the harshness and
+roughness the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> has thought it necessary to display
+has done more to strengthen the Opposition than the
+changes and concessions already pre-arranged will do
+to dissolve it. They have been suffered in this way to
+gain a position which they might never have won if the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> had exercised more foresight. Whether all the
+elements of the Opposition will be found reliable, pure
+in their aims and loyal in their hearts, the future will
+show. At present I only record the audacious policy of
+the majority based on cunning calculations, as it has
+been evinced in the early days of the discussion. But
+<pb n='546'/><anchor id='Pg546'/>
+the majority naturally includes men of different minds;
+there are some who would like to be well rid of the
+affair, and others who would gladly discover a formula
+not looking like a positive innovation which might
+satisfy opponents, while the great mass of them want
+the blow to be struck so that, after crushing the Opposition
+within the Council, they may annihilate it without
+the Council also. These last have the upper hand
+in the majority, and will probably retain it till the
+general debate is over and the doctrine itself and its
+definition come to be discussed. They are led by cool,
+calculating heads, but consist for the most part of the
+uneducated and unlearned mass of the episcopate who
+have no independence, the people who during Strossmayer's
+speech presented the spectacle of a rabble of
+conspirators rather than an ordered assembly. To keep
+them in the requisite state of exaltation the speeches
+must be adapted to their intellectual level. And as
+they are more easily excited than controlled they do
+not of course exhibit the majority in a favourable
+light, and one may be prepared at any moment for
+the Council being disgraced by an outbreak of their
+frenzy. Nothing more of the kind however has happened
+yet.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='547'/><anchor id='Pg547'/>
+
+<p>
+At the head of the extreme party stands the close
+ally of the Jesuits, the Archbishop of Westminster.
+He was the first to say out with the utmost distinctness
+that infallibility belongs to the Pope alone and
+independently of the Episcopate. The ultramontane
+speakers, Pie, Patrizzi and Deschamps, have vied
+with one another in their endeavours to get this extreme
+view of Manning's accepted, which they themselves
+did not all share before. The emancipation of
+the Pope from the entire Episcopate is the very turning-point
+of the whole controversy, the object for which the
+Council was put on the stage; infallibility tied to the
+consent of the united or dispersed Episcopate nearly all
+the Bishops would accept, for very few indeed clearly
+understand that even Councils depend on another consent
+than that of the Episcopate. But such a definition
+of infallibility would cost Rome the very thing
+she has laboured so much and sinned so much to
+gain. It is a great advantage for the Opposition that
+in this matter there are no formulas of compromise
+possible but such as are manifestly perfidious and
+insincere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 17th Deschamps, Archbishop of Mechlin,
+made perhaps the most important, certainly the most
+<pb n='548'/><anchor id='Pg548'/>
+remarkable, speech delivered in favour of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Constitutio</foreign>.
+He is considered the ablest speaker of his party, which
+notoriously has no superabundance of good speakers,
+and is said to be a superficial man who takes things
+easily. He not only committed himself to the extremest
+section of the party, but denounced his opponents as
+bad Christians not walking in the fear of God. The
+change of tone was much remarked in him, as in the
+Bishop of Poitiers. Manning exhibits the same change,
+who now maintains that all who do not submit to the
+majority might well be excommunicated directly after
+the promulgation of the decree. Two German Bishops,
+Greith and Hefele, spoke on the same day; and indeed
+in this debate many weighty voices will be raised from
+every land where the contest about the Church is being
+fought, to point to the practical dangers involved in
+the circumstances of the case&mdash;a kind of argument Pius
+is wont to put aside with a <q>Noli timere.</q> Greith of
+St. Gallen spoke for Switzerland; as a learned theologian
+he declared himself against the definition on scientific
+grounds, and as a Swiss Bishop on account of the present
+circumstances of his country; for he is persuaded
+that his Swiss brother bishops, with their zeal for the
+infallibilist decree, are simply forging weapons against
+<pb n='549'/><anchor id='Pg549'/>
+the Church for the Radicals. Bishop Hefele of Rottenburg
+touched in the course of his speech on the affair
+of Honorius, which must later on come into the discussion.
+Next day Hefele read Cardinal Rauscher's speech.
+But Cardinal Schwarzenberg's address exceeded all
+expectations and left a profound impression. Cardinal
+Donnet and the Archbishop of Saragossa, who spoke in
+the name of the Deputation, did not bring the defence
+any further or develop any new points of history, and&mdash;which
+is more important&mdash;gave no further information
+about the plans and hopes of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> and the
+majority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Thursday the 19th Cardinal Cullen, Archbishop
+of Dublin, spoke, who for twenty years has been the
+protagonist of Romanism in the British isles. With
+sound tact he chose the most learned Bishop of the
+minority, Hefele, for attack, and assailed not his speech
+but his publications. Yet he did not attempt to refute
+him, but only to prove that he had contradicted himself,
+since the account of Honorius given in his History
+of Councils is different from that in his latest work.
+It is true that in the History, where no doctrinal inferences
+were to be drawn, the theological significance
+of the condemnation of Honorius does not receive the
+<pb n='550'/><anchor id='Pg550'/>
+same exhaustive appreciation and exposition as in the
+little tractate on the question whether he was justly
+condemned for heresy. But there is no difference of
+principle between the two works; in both Hefele says
+plainly that Honorius was justly pronounced a heretic,
+even if he was no heretic at heart. But when the two
+passages are separated from each other, it can be made
+to look as though he had maintained in the former that
+Honorius was really orthodox whereas he now declares
+that he was a heretic. But the process could with
+equal reason be reversed, and the heresy of Honorius
+shown to be affirmed in the History and his orthodoxy
+in the pamphlet. But what use would even an orthodox
+Pope be for upholding the purity of the Church's
+doctrinal deposit, if he used heretical formulas to
+express his own really true opinion?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+None the less however was Cullen's attack received
+with great satisfaction, for the ruling powers know well
+enough on what the Bishop of Rottenburg's opposition
+is based, and think to subdue German science&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the
+devil himself&mdash;in his person. On the same day the
+Patriarch Jussuf uttered words that deserve to be laid
+to heart on the consequences such a dogmatic blunder
+would entail in the East&mdash;a significant indication that
+<pb n='551'/><anchor id='Pg551'/>
+the Orientals are not prepared to bend obediently under
+the yoke of a decree aimed at their ritual and their
+rights as well as their tradition. The Archbishop of
+Corfu answered him next day. There is very little
+that can be properly called debating, for the order of proceedings
+is better suited for academical addresses than for
+real discussion; the practice of making prelates speak in
+their order of precedence makes any honest interchange
+of blows impossible. But the Greek coming forward
+to speak looked like a preconcerted answer to the
+Armenian. The Archbishop of Corfu insisted that, so
+far from the dogma rendering the reunion of the Greek
+Church more difficult, such a result was inconceivable
+without it, nor could the dogma excite any suspicion,
+because the Greeks found it in their tradition as well
+as their Fathers and Councils, and envied the Latin
+Church her infallible Pope. In evidence of this he
+cited the passages where the Pope's primacy is recognised.
+The great body of the Fathers listened to this
+with grave faces: it was only following the style of their
+own theologians.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But three more important speakers had been heard
+before the Corfiote. The first was Simor, primate of
+Hungary, who was chosen, as is well known, into the
+<pb n='552'/><anchor id='Pg552'/>
+Deputation on Faith and has shown himself a more
+zealous advocate of its proposals and adherent of the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> than ever. The majority believed that it possessed
+in him a master of Latin who could rival the
+eloquent leader of the Opposition, and Simor justified
+his reputation as an accomplished Latinist. But he
+spoke&mdash;assuredly to the no small disgust and amazement
+of the majority&mdash;as an unequivocal opponent of
+the proposed decree. And this implied that the whole
+Hungarian Episcopate would vote against it. He was
+followed by a feeble old man whose speech fell flat after
+that of the eloquent primate, and who could only be
+known to a few of his hearers, though he holds an
+important place in the history of the last generation. This
+was John MacHale, for the last thirty-five years Archbishop
+of Tuam and formerly the most powerful prelate
+in Ireland, a famous name in the days of O'Connell;
+but his political rôle has long been played out, and he
+belongs to a bygone age and an obsolete school. For the
+twenty years during which Cullen has been introducing
+Roman absolutism into Ireland his influence has been
+on the decline, and while he was expounding his
+antagonism to the definition to-day in a long and complicated
+address, men said to themselves, <q>magni
+<pb n='553'/><anchor id='Pg553'/>
+nominis umbra.</q> It was the accumulated debt of twenty
+years he paid off to Cardinal Cullen. But he can
+hardly be expected to have gained over any of his
+countrymen to the Opposition besides the three or four
+of them who already belong to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+MacHale was succeeded by the Archbishop of Paris,
+the most accomplished and skilful, and therefore the
+most feared, of all the Opposition prelates. Darboy was
+lately the most influential advocate of that system of
+dallying and postponement which has so grievously
+injured the minority, and was involved through his
+intimate alliance with the Tuileries in the unhappy
+policy of his Government, so that he had become somewhat
+less trusted and influential. So much greater was
+the impression produced by his speech to-day, wherein
+he declared distinctly and repeatedly that a dogmatic
+decree not accepted by the whole Episcopate could not
+have any binding force. A suppressed murmur which
+ran through the ranks of the majority as he spoke
+seems to herald coming storms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So far the Opposition has made its voice clearly
+heard. That it has on its side reason, Scripture and
+history signifies nothing for the moment; what is important
+is that it makes its strength felt, that it has
+<pb n='554'/><anchor id='Pg554'/>
+won over waverers or doubters to its ranks, and that it
+has at last spoken plainly. The position of parties and
+the question itself will take many new shapes, when
+the separate chapters of the Constitution come on for
+discussion.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='555'/><anchor id='Pg555'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Forty-Ninth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, May 26, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The intellectual superiority of
+the Opposition has made itself so sensibly felt in the
+course of the debate on infallibility that they have
+visibly won in spirit and confidence, while a decrease
+of the assurance of victory hitherto manifested by the
+majority is observable. There is no sign yet of the
+breaking up of the Opposition or the desertion of its
+members to the infallibilist camp. The Court party had
+confidently reckoned on a considerable number of mere
+inopportunists giving in and separating from the opponents
+of the actual doctrine of infallibility, as soon as
+the dogma came to be discussed. The latter was said
+to be a mere tiny fraction, who would eventually take
+fright at their own impotence and come over. But as
+yet this hope has not been realized, and there are many
+indications that it is not likely to be realized, for the
+course of events and their experiences in Rome, as well
+<pb n='556'/><anchor id='Pg556'/>
+as the discussions, both oral and written, have converted
+inopportunists into decided fallibilists. Cardinal
+Schwarzenberg has spoken with great power and
+dignity, and even the most zealous adherents of the
+Roman dogma must have been somewhat impressed
+by his declaration that its effect in Bohemia would be
+to make the nation first schismatic and then gradually
+Protestant. It at the same time illustrated the conduct
+of the Jesuits in a way that will not be forgotten.
+When the Archbishop of Paris affirmed that the much
+desired infallibilist decree was not one of the causes of the
+Council, but its sole cause, every one felt what a bitter
+truth had been uttered, and that the veil would thereby
+be torn away from that web of untruths and dishonest
+reticences about the object of the synod, by which the
+Bishops had been deceived and enticed as it were into
+a trap to Rome. Veuillot indeed had openly said
+in his official organ at the end of April, that to decree
+the new dogma was the principal and at bottom the
+sole office of the Council. That was at the very time
+when about eighty Bishops put out their strong protestation
+that they had come to Rome under the erroneous
+impression, deliberately suggested by the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, that the
+question of infallibility would not be brought before
+<pb n='557'/><anchor id='Pg557'/>
+the Council; while yet Cardoni had many months before,
+in the Commission on Faith, presented by command
+of the Pope the report which has lately been printed,
+and the whole Commission had agreed with him that
+papal infallibility should be defined. That same Commission,
+with the Jesuit Perrone and Dr. Schwetz of
+Vienna at its head, has now presented an address to
+the Pope urging the definition of the new article of
+faith, without which those worthies think they cannot
+exist any longer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The infallibilist speaker who created most sensation
+was Cardinal Cullen, Archbishop of Dublin. He
+gained the warm applause of his party by the aggressive
+tone of his speech, in which he attacked especially
+Hefele and Kenrick. He appealed to the testimony of
+MacHale to show that the mind of Ireland has always
+been infallibilist&mdash;a glaring falsehood, as is proved by
+the famous Declaration of the Irish Catholics in 1757
+formally repudiating the doctrine. And it made no
+slight impression, when the grey-haired MacHale rose
+to repudiate the pretended belief in infallibility not
+merely for himself but for Ireland. But it is certainly
+true that in former times for more than a century the
+Irish people, like the Spanish, was victimized to papal
+<pb n='558'/><anchor id='Pg558'/>
+infallibility. Every Irishman or Spaniard, who knew
+the history of his country, would recoil with horror from
+a theory which has borne such poisonous fruit for both
+nations in the past and may be equally injurious in
+the future. To acquaint the Catholic tenants in Ireland
+with the infallible decisions of Popes about heresy
+and heretics would be enough at once to increase ten-fold
+the agrarian crimes prevalent there, and would be
+the surest means for reproducing such a massacre as
+occurred there in 1641.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Cullen replied to the Archbishop of St. Louis,
+<q>non est verum,</q> the aged prelate requested leave of
+the Legates to defend himself briefly. It was refused.
+Hefele was as little free to answer Cullen's attack, and
+has therefore had a pamphlet in his justification printed
+at Naples. A new work by one of the most illustrious
+of the French Bishops is also expected from Naples,
+designed to prove against the Jesuits of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> the
+necessity of moral unanimity for dogmatic decrees.
+Another Irishman, Leahy, Archbishop of Cashel, said
+such absurd things in favour of the Court dogma that
+his speech was considered a clear gain for the minority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are 89 speakers inscribed for the general
+debate, and not a third of them have yet spoken. This
+<pb n='559'/><anchor id='Pg559'/>
+opens out a prospect of the debate being spun out to
+a great length, oppressive as the tropical heat is now
+become. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> still relies on the Northerners
+being tamed down. If only a good many of them
+would emulate the example of the Bishop of Hildesheim,
+and go away! The plan has often succeeded
+with English and Irish juries, of locking them up, when
+they could not agree, till they found a true verdict. But
+that won't answer here. On the contrary the longer
+the debate lasts, the more numerous the Opposition
+party becomes. At first many Bishops thought they
+might fairly gratify the good and amiable Pius, who won
+all hearts, even by making a new dogma, and give him
+the present he so greatly longed for. But Pius
+has completely cured his former worshippers of this
+disposition to make an article of faith <q>pour les beaux
+yeux du Pape.</q> It has no doubt happened before that
+Italian Bishops have been treated by the Pope like
+servants, hired for the day's work and dismissed again
+if they did not obey the orders of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. One need
+only refer to that parody on a synod, the fifth Lateran
+assembly, when Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi> propounded downright forgeries
+and untruths to his Italian Bishops, who had
+to call themselves an Œcumenical Council, and dictated
+<pb n='560'/><anchor id='Pg560'/>
+their votes. But even there no one ventured to treat
+Transalpine Bishops&mdash;Germans, French and Hungarians&mdash;with
+the insolent contempt now shown, to refuse
+even a reply to their urgent petitions and representations,
+and to make them drain the cup of humiliations
+and grievances to the very dregs. But the great task
+to be achieved in the first months of the Council was
+the kneading and manipulating the Bishops in all possible
+ways, so as to make them feel the immeasurable
+gulf between the master and the servants, that they might
+be more ready at last to sacrifice their episcopal dignity
+and ancient rights on the altar of Roman supremacy.
+When once they have assented to the infallibilist
+dogma, they neither can nor ought to be or desire to
+be anything else but passive and unintelligent promulgators
+and executors of papal commands and decrees
+on faith. That what is really required of them is to
+abdicate their office as a teaching body and themselves
+abolish their authority, Ketteler has lately declared
+without reserve in the Congregation; and he is a man
+who has profited much by his Roman schooling,
+though in a quite different sense from what his master
+intended. The Roman system of drill does not
+succeed with Germans, Hungarians and Americans.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='561'/><anchor id='Pg561'/>
+
+<p>
+A note received a fortnight ago from Paris by M. de
+Banneville, to be communicated or read to Cardinal Antonelli,
+has created great excitement here, owing to his
+studiously concealing it from his diplomatic colleagues.
+Its substance is as follows: France renounces any
+further interference with what is going on here, and
+contents herself henceforth with taking note of the
+decisions of the Pope and the Council. The Government
+has done its duty, as a friendly Catholic power,
+in seeking to withdraw the Court of Rome from the
+perilous path on which it has entered. The attempt
+has proved fruitless. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> seems resolved to
+ruin itself. France will maintain the attitude of a
+passive spectator, but accepts the altered condition of
+things introduced by this declaration of war on the
+part of the Roman Court. On the day of the definition
+the Concordat ceases to be in force and the previous
+relation of Church and State expires. The State separates
+itself from the Church and the French troops
+leave Rome. Separation of Church and State means in
+France and elsewhere that the budget of worship will
+be dropped, and the clergy must be supported by the
+faithful. And here I may mention a fact which has
+come to my knowledge on the best authority. When
+<pb n='562'/><anchor id='Pg562'/>
+Count Daru was going to despatch his famous memorial
+to the Holy See, he wished for an interpolation in
+the Chamber on the attitude of the Government towards
+the occurrences in Rome, and a friend of his applied
+on the subject to one of the most celebrated orators of
+the Left, who declined, saying, <q>Rome fait trop bien
+nos affaires pour qu'il soit de notre intérêt de lui créer
+des embarras.</q> The contents of the note mentioned
+above are confirmed by the words of a leading statesman
+at Paris, quoted by a Bishop who has lately returned
+from thence, that for his own part he considered
+the separation of Church and State in France inevitable.
+He had however assented to the well-meant attempt
+of Count Daru to warn the Pope, and if possible deter
+him from his short-sighted enterprise; but as that
+attempt had proved futile, it remained to take advantage
+of the blunders of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. So enormous a
+spiritual power as the Court of Rome was aiming
+at was incompatible with the possession of secular
+power, and accordingly the French troops must be
+withdrawn from Rome, and matters left to take their
+course.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even now there is a wish discernible among Cardinals
+like di Pietro, Corsi and Bilio, to discover some
+<pb n='563'/><anchor id='Pg563'/>
+intermediate formula, while the party men, like Manning,
+Pie, Cullen, and all who have been concerned in the
+agitation and have staked their credit on its result, hold
+to the most uncompromising form, as laid down in the
+existing programme. The latter reckon on their overpowering
+preponderance of numbers, on the power of
+the Pope, and the dread of ecclesiastical methods of
+coercion, such as excommunication and the like, whereby
+all resistance will be certainly put down. On the
+other hand, the Cardinals and members of the Papal
+Cabinet just referred to prefer to set their hopes on the
+hazy views and yielding temper of many Bishops of
+the minority, and think that an ambiguous formula
+might serve at once to delude and divide them. Their
+watchword is <q>conciliazione, un partito di conciliazione.</q>
+But all their ingenuity is expended in the elaboration
+of a phrase which may contain in a somewhat allegorical
+and obscure form the infallibility and universal
+monarchy of the Pope. To this conciliatory section
+also belongs a man who understands the greatness of the
+danger clearly enough, and who so lately uttered words
+which have become notorious here: <q>This Pope began
+by destroying the State, and now will close his career
+by destroying the Church too.</q> Yet the speaker of
+<pb n='564'/><anchor id='Pg564'/>
+these words does not scruple to use his high position
+and influence for actively furthering the undertakings
+which must lead to the catastrophe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is impossible for outsiders to form anything like an
+adequate conception of the complication of views and
+plans and the multifarious activity of the Roman <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>prelatura</foreign>.
+Things happen which must appear incredible to
+every one who has heard of the proverbial skill and gift of
+accurate calculation possessed by the ruling clergy here.
+Thus a member of a powerful Order is sentenced to six
+years' imprisonment by the Holy Office on account of an
+occurrence in a nunnery here, the convent being at the
+same time broken up and the nuns distributed over
+other convents. Yet after scarcely two years' imprisonment
+this man, who is unhappily a German, is brought
+back here, and intrusted with the preparation of the
+draft decrees for the Council, and now the Court trusts
+to its favourite <q>segreto del S. Ufficio</q> for the cause
+of his sentence and of the dissolution of the convent
+not coming to the ears of the Bishops, but in vain. The
+matter has created too great a sensation, and the culprit
+is too well known.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the minority are being plied with reasons,
+which are only mentioned cursorily, or not at all, in
+<pb n='565'/><anchor id='Pg565'/>
+the printed documents of the Court and the majority.
+They are told that all their own interests depend on
+the papal authority being preserved intact, and that
+the evils they fear from the proclamation of the dogma
+cannot come into comparison with this common interest.
+They are bidden to remember how far the
+Pope has already committed himself in this matter;
+since John <hi rend='smallcaps'>xxii.</hi>&mdash;more than 600 years ago&mdash;no Pope
+has thrown the Brennus sword of his authority into the
+scale to decide a question of doctrine, but Pius has cut
+himself off from all possibility of retreat by his <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>,
+his conversations with many Bishops, and his letters of
+encouragement and commendation to infallibilist writers.
+He has declared, not once or twice but a hundred times,
+that he knows and <emph>feels</emph> his infallibility, and wills the
+Catholic world to believe it. He might simply by a
+Bull condemn all who oppose it as heretics, and how
+many of the Bishops would summon courage to resist
+the Bull?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As yet these reasons, practical as they appear, have
+not produced much effect. The Opposition grows
+visibly, and the speeches of its members have produced
+an impression quite unexpected by themselves. The
+words of the Melchite Patriarch, Jussuf, have kindled
+<pb n='566'/><anchor id='Pg566'/>
+a flame among the Orientals too, and there are Bishops
+who tell me they had not thought it possible for a discourse
+in the Council Hall to produce so great a revolution
+of feeling. But I will not conceal from you that you
+may find in Margotti's <hi rend='italic'>Unita</hi>, which draws its information
+from the highest authority, news in comparison to
+which my statements must appear pure fables. He
+writes from here on the 18th of May, <q>The action of
+the Holy Ghost is beginning to be felt; the Opposition
+diminishes daily. Cardoni has just issued his masterly
+work on papal infallibility, and now every one comprehends
+that it is the sole remedy and defence against
+the dominant pest of journalism and a free press. We
+must have a Pope who, being himself infallible, can
+<emph>daily</emph> teach, condemn and define, and whose utterances
+no Catholic ever dares to doubt.</q><note place='foot'><q>Al male dominante della licenza dei tipi, per cui il giornalismo nega
+e bestemmia ogni giorno, bisogna contraporre il salutare rimedio del Papa
+infallibile, che ogni giorno può insegnare, condannare, definire, senza che
+mai sia licito ai cattolici dubitare de' suoi oraculi.</q></note> So runs the statement
+in the <hi rend='italic'>Unita</hi> of May 24. Inconceivable blindness
+of past generations, who allowed whole centuries
+to pass without needing or asking for a single papal
+definition! Henceforth the definition wheel, which the
+Pope is to turn, is never to remain still for a day&mdash;because
+of journalism.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='567'/><anchor id='Pg567'/>
+
+<p>
+Thus does civilisation increase the wants of men.
+Our forefathers had to lead a joyless life without sugar,
+coffee, tea, alcohol and cigars, and stood on so low a
+level of cultivation that they fancied they got on very
+well without any infallible papal definition. But we,
+who are so gloriously advanced, require besides bodily
+enjoyments many&mdash;if possible very many&mdash;daily infallible
+definitions, and the Pope, out of sheer inexhaustible
+goodness, is on the point of acceding to the
+earnest prayers of 180 millions and opening the definition
+machine. Veuillot lately declared it was high
+time that the fact of the Pope's permanent divine
+inspiration should be universally acknowledged; Margotti
+says that we want not only this, but daily
+definitions.<note place='foot'>[The English Jesuit, Father Gallwey, says they will be like <q>the daily
+provision of manna</q> to the Israelites.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> In this noble rivalry of the two Court
+journalists the Italian has evidently stolen a march
+on the Frenchman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In my former statistics the number of Americans
+was put too high and of French too low. Only 23
+Americans were lately calculated to belong to the
+Opposition, to whom must be added 10 Orientals, 4
+Portuguese, 10 Italians and 5 Spaniards, making the
+whole minority over 120.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='568'/><anchor id='Pg568'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fiftieth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, May 27, 1870.</hi>&mdash;New speakers are continually
+inscribing their names for the debate on
+infallibility. And as only four can usually speak in
+one sitting, it is impossible to foresee the end of
+the general debate, after which the detailed discussion
+of the separate chapters is to follow. The
+minority seem resolved at this second discussion to
+enter thoroughly for the first time on the numerous
+separate points, exegetical, dogmatic and historical,
+which offer themselves for consideration. If the
+majority and the Legates allow this, the end will not
+be near reached by June 29; and after that date
+residence in Rome is held to be intolerable and the continuation
+of the Council impracticable. This last assumption
+I conceive to be mistaken. The Pope can very
+easily go to Castel Gandolfo for his summer holidays,
+while he leaves the Council to go on here. That it
+<pb n='569'/><anchor id='Pg569'/>
+should consist of hundreds of Bishops is quite unnecessary;
+former Popes have known how to manage in such
+cases. Eugenius <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> had his Florentine Council nominally
+continued, after the Bishops were all gone except
+a handful of Italians; Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi> was content with about
+sixty Italians at his so-called fifth Lateran Council.
+What is to hinder Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> from keeping on the Council,
+after the Northern and distant Bishops are departed,
+with the Bishops of his own States and the titular
+episcopate resident in Rome, together with a host of
+Neapolitans and Sicilians? Some too would be sure
+to remain of the leaders and zealots of the majority.
+But the Court party can cut short the discussion and
+push matters to a vote whenever they like. The order
+of business enables them to do so, but of course this
+imperial policy will only be applied when the Pope
+gives the signal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nearly the whole sitting of May 25 was taken up by
+a speech of Manning's, who justified the expectations
+formed of him by assuring the Opposition that they
+were all heretics <foreign rend='italic'>en masse</foreign>. But he left the question
+undecided, whether they had already incurred the
+penalties of heresy prescribed in the canon law. Ketteler's
+speech made a precisely opposite impression.
+<pb n='570'/><anchor id='Pg570'/>
+Men were in a state of eager suspense as to what he
+would say, for he was known to have passed through a
+mental conflict. Ten months ago, in his publication on the
+Council which was then convoked, he had come forward
+of his own accord as the advocate of papal infallibility;
+he had come to Rome full of burning zeal and devotion
+for the Pope, though at Fulda he had declared the new
+dogma to be inopportune. I omit the intermediate
+steps of the process of disillusionizing and sobering he
+has gone through. His speech has shown that, like
+many others, he has become from an inopportunist a
+decided opponent of the dogma itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such a change of mind based on a conscientious
+weighing of testimonies and facts is inconceivable and
+incredible to a regular Roman. When some of the
+Vicars Apostolic who are supported at the Pope's cost
+signed the representation against the definition, the
+indignation was universal among the Monsignori and
+in the clerical world here. <q>Questi Vicari, che mangiano
+il pane del Santo Padre!</q> they exclaimed in
+virtuous disgust. That a poor Bishop, and one too who
+is maintained by the Pope, should yet have a conscience
+and dare to follow it, is thought out of the question
+here; and this view comes out with a certain <foreign rend='italic'>naïveté</foreign>.
+<pb n='571'/><anchor id='Pg571'/>
+The anxiety of the German Bishops about the new
+dogma perplexing so many Christians and shaking or
+destroying the faith and adherence to the Church of
+many thousands can hardly be mentioned here, so
+impatient are the Monsignori and Cardinals at hearing
+of it. People here say, <q>That does not trouble us the
+least; the Germans at best are but half Catholics, all
+deeply infected with Protestantism; they have no Holy
+Office and have little respect for the Index. Pure and
+firm faith is to be looked for among the Sicilians,
+Neapolitans and Spaniards; and they are infallibilists
+to a man. And even in Germany your women and
+rustics are sound. Why do you have so many schools,
+and think every one must learn to read? Take example
+from us where only one in ten can read, and all believe
+the more readily in the infallible living book, the Pope.
+If thousands do really become unbelievers, that is not
+worth speaking of in comparison with the brilliant
+triumph of the Papacy now rendered infallible, and the
+inestimable gain of putting an end to all controversy
+and uncertainty in the Church for the future.</q> When
+I look at the careless security of the majority, I could
+often fancy myself living in the year 1517. The view
+about foreign countries and Churches prevalent here is
+<pb n='572'/><anchor id='Pg572'/>
+just what Molière's Sganarelli expresses about physicians
+and patients: <q>Les veuves ne sont jamais pour nous,
+et c'est toujours la faute de celui qui meurt.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The finance minister has had the bad condition of
+the papal treasury communicated to the Bishops; a
+standing annual deficit of 30 million francs, and the
+Peter's pence decreasing! Some new means of supply
+must be discovered, and the extremest extension of
+ecclesiastical centralization and papal absolutism has
+always been recognised at Rome as the most productive
+source of revenue. Every one here believes that the
+new dogma will prove very lucrative and draw money
+to Rome by a magnetic attraction. It will make the
+Pope <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>de jure</foreign> supreme lord and master of all Christian
+lands and their resources. The ultramontane jurists
+and theologians have long maintained that he can
+compel States as well as individuals to pay in to him
+such sums as are required for Church purposes. And
+there is no more urgent need for the Church now, than
+that an end should be put to the deficit of the Roman
+Government. And if it should be impossible or unadvisable
+to put in force these supreme monetary rights of the
+Papacy at once, still, when the temporal supremacy of
+the Pope is made an article of faith, Rome possesses
+<pb n='573'/><anchor id='Pg573'/>
+the key which may be used at the right moment for
+opening the coffers and money-bags. And therefore
+the opponents of the dogma are regarded as enemies of
+the Roman State economy and the wealth of the Roman
+clergy; and the variance between the two parties is
+embittered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the Pope is never weary of carrying on
+his personal solicitations for the votes of the Bishops;
+he has the right of being a persevering beggar. But
+one hears less of conversions to the majority than of
+men going over to the Opposition; and the effluences
+from the Tomb of the Apostles close to the Council
+Hall, of which such great expectations were formed,
+seem to act in the opposite direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A new system of tactics has been for some time
+adopted, in France principally, and is now to be introduced
+into Germany. The clergy in the dioceses of
+Opposition Bishops are to be seduced into signing
+addresses expressing strongly their belief in papal infallibility
+and desire for its speedy promulgation. This
+device has been pursued with great success through
+means of the Paris nunciature and the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>. The
+French parish priests who, since the Concordat, have
+been removeable at the will of the Bishops and have
+<pb n='574'/><anchor id='Pg574'/>
+suffered sufficiently from their arbitrary caprice in
+transferring or depriving them, see their only resource in
+the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, and the notion has lately been disseminated
+among them that the infallibilist dogma will procure
+their complete emancipation from episcopal authority.
+Accordingly almost every number of the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi> contains
+enthusiastic addresses, which might be tripled by
+making all the nuns subscribe, as they would do with
+the greatest pleasure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The plan which has proved so successful in France
+is to be adopted now in Germany also. The nuncio at
+Munich reports that there is a swarm of red-hot infallibilists
+there, and that the clergy are eagerly awaiting
+the news of the definition; the diocesan organs of
+Munich and Augsburg, together with the clerico-political
+daily papers, are quoted as indubitable testimonies,
+and the Bishops of Cologne, Augsburg, Munich,
+Mayence, etc., are told on high authority that they have
+nobody behind them, and that their claim to represent
+the faith of their dioceses is in contradiction with facts.
+There are indeed no numerously signed addresses to
+show in Rome, but the daily papers give weighty
+evidence. Silence, it is thought here, implies consent,
+the women and the rustics are certainly for the Pope.
+<pb n='575'/><anchor id='Pg575'/>
+The Pope says in his supreme self-satisfaction, <q>Scio
+omnia.</q> He knows the true state of things beyond the
+Alps far better than the Bishops; the Jesuits and their
+pupils and the nuncios take care of that. Hugo Grotius
+says, with reference to Richelieu, <q>Butillerius Pater
+et Josephus Capucinus negotia cruda accipiunt, cocta
+ad Cardinalem deferunt.</q> So it is here, the Jesuits
+do what the Fathers Boutillier and Joseph did in Paris.
+Pius receives only what is <q>cooked,</q> and twice cooked,
+first in the Cologne and Munich kitchen and then in
+the Roman. The German Bishops remember with
+some discomfort that they themselves sharply rejected
+and censured every declaration of adhesion, and violently
+suppressed the movement only just beginning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Cardinal General-Vicar has ordered public
+prayers for a fortnight by the Pope's command: the
+faithful are to invoke the Holy Ghost for the Council,
+since the whole world presents so wretched an appearance
+(<foreign lang='it' rend='italic'>miserabile aspetto dell' orbe</foreign>), and the longer the
+conflict (of the Council) with the world increases, the
+more glorious will be the victory, and then, it is said,
+will all nations behold miracles&mdash;which appears from
+the context to mean that, considering the opposition of
+the world (and of so many Bishops), the erection of the
+<pb n='576'/><anchor id='Pg576'/>
+new article of faith must be regarded as a miracle of
+divine omnipotence, but a miracle which will certainly
+be wrought. Many interpret this to mean that people
+must be prepared for a conciliar <foreign rend='italic'>coup d'état</foreign>. But as
+matters stand, it can hardly be supposed that the Court
+party will let matters come to a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>non placet</foreign> of at least
+120 Bishops, nor would anything be gained by cutting
+short the debate. In the last analysis the main ground
+of the dogma with the majority always resolves itself
+into this&mdash;that the present Pope and his predecessors
+for many years past have held themselves infallible.
+That is the only ground on which the Dominicans,
+Jesuits and Cardinals have interpolated it into the
+theology of the schools. Pius might certainly define
+it in a Bull to the entire satisfaction of the majority,
+and thereby put an end to the contention of the Bishops.
+An end? it may be asked. Well, yes&mdash;the end of the
+beginning.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='577'/><anchor id='Pg577'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifty-First Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 2, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The debate drags on its weary
+length without any turning. Of real discussion there
+is none, for very few of the prelates can speak in
+Latin without preparation. As I have said before,
+academical discourses are delivered, almost always without
+any reference to what has immediately preceded.
+Only the majority have the right of reply allowed them.
+If a Bishop is attacked or calumniated, he cannot answer
+till his turn comes, which is often not for some weeks,
+as was Kenrick's case; and if he has spoken already,
+he cannot speak again in the same debate, and cannot
+therefore defend himself at all, as occurred with Hefele.
+But the members of the Deputation can speak whenever
+they choose; they interrupt the order and interpose
+as often as seems necessary to them for defending their
+proposals or weakening the force of an important speech
+on the other side. Very often they break in on the
+<pb n='578'/><anchor id='Pg578'/>
+course of proceedings quite arbitrarily and without any
+connection with previous speakers. They have the
+stenographic reports before their eyes, and thus know
+the exact words of the speaker and can answer them
+while their opponents have no similar advantage. That
+all this implies an iniquitous injustice and want of freedom
+never occurs to the dominant party, who are on
+the contrary astonished at the kindness and patience of
+the Pope in allowing an opponent of his omnipotence
+and advocate of doctrines long since condemned to
+use St. Peter's as the theatre, and his Council as the
+occasion, of a persevering attack on his dearest wishes,
+ideas and acts. They ask themselves how long he will
+tolerate so strange a reversal of his plans and views.
+It is certain that his excitement has reached fever heat,
+but it has not yet been resolved to break off the debate,
+which is so far remarkable, inasmuch as according to the
+opinion of the Court it can neither have any practical results
+nor any character of sober reality. As they did not
+regard it from the first as a means for establishing the
+truth, it must now appear to them simply a hindrance in
+the way of the truth already ascertained. For those who
+attack infallibility, and thus utter error and blasphemy
+over the tomb of the Apostles, freedom of speech can
+<pb n='579'/><anchor id='Pg579'/>
+be no right in the opinion of the majority, but simply a
+favour dependent on the pleasure of the deeply injured
+and offended chief. It is characteristic of the present
+stage of the affair, that during this debate there has
+been no disposition shown to interrupt the speakers of
+the minority. Signs of discontent have been frequent
+enough, but no further attempt to stop a speech by
+force.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is still an immense and unprofitable number of
+speakers enrolled. Above a hundred have sent in their
+names since the beginning, who might easily have been
+debarred from doing so, and the tediousness of the discussion
+is aggravated by the members of the Deputation,
+who lengthen it out still further by their frequent and
+usually prolix interpositions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chief events of the last fortnight have been the
+speeches of Manning and Valerga for the dogma, and
+of Ketteler, Conolly and Strossmayer against it. The
+Bishop of Mayence spoke on Monday, May 23, when
+he expressed his opinion more forcibly and gave more
+offence than any previous speaker. He defended the constitution
+of the Church against the Roman conspiracy,
+citing the arguments contained in the pamphlet he
+had before distributed, and denounced against ecclesiastical
+<pb n='580'/><anchor id='Pg580'/>
+centralization the same penalty of revolution,
+incident to a centralized State, which, he said, is already
+knocking at the doors. He gave his decisive adhesion
+to those who demand unanimous consent, and declared
+that he had always held the personal infallibility to be
+<q>opinio probabilissima,</q> but could find no necessary
+certainty in it, neither <q>certitudo dogmatica</q> nor <q>veritas
+dogmatizanda.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One might think that a man who is so unclear about
+the logic of history and the principles of morals belongs
+to the majority. However the impression produced
+by Ketteler's speech was favourable to the minority,
+and all who have watched his attitude before the
+last four months, especially at Fulda, must have recognised
+the decided advance in the line taken by the
+Opposition. Many think the conversion is complete,
+and the great wound of the Opposition&mdash;its containing
+members ready sooner or later to turn renegades&mdash;finally
+closed. The Bishop of Mayence was at first
+believed to be the author of the pamphlet he has distributed,
+but it was not composed under his eye or
+under his influence, nor even at his suggestion, and
+bears no trace of his mind. The general line is Maret's,
+but his leading idea, that in case of a conflict a Council
+<pb n='581'/><anchor id='Pg581'/>
+is superior to a Pope, does not occur in it. Ketteler
+must have acquired a great deal of Roman experience
+and non-Roman development before he would denounce
+a papal decree to his country and his diocese
+as uncatholic. But the advance which he, like others,
+and more than many others, has already made, is unquestionably
+a gain, and gives a peculiar force to his
+words. But it has damaged and discredited the minority
+that so many Bishops are more careful about the position
+and influence of the Church than about the purity
+of doctrine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I must return once more to Manning's speech of
+May 25, as it was very interesting and important. He
+asserted roundly that infallibility was already really a
+doctrine of the Church, which could not be denied
+without sin (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>sine publico peccato mortali</foreign>) or proximate
+heresy (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>proximâ hæresi</foreign>), and therefore they did not
+want to make a new dogma but simply to proclaim an
+existing one. In these bold but highly significant
+words Manning pointed to what many better men
+choose to be blind to. He no longer acknowledges the
+opponents of the doctrine as brothers in faith, as members
+of one and the same Church, since they do not
+satisfy his conditions of orthodoxy; his faith and theirs
+<pb n='582'/><anchor id='Pg582'/>
+are not the same. He has been the first to proclaim
+this great truth in Council, and it is time for the minority
+to ask themselves, whether unity still really
+survives in the sense hitherto maintained against Protestants,
+whether the foe is really still outside and
+has not penetrated into the inmost sanctuary of the
+Church, for the temple must be cleansed before the
+nations are converted. The minority can no longer
+live in peace with Manning and his like, or imagine
+that the contest does not threaten the very existence of
+the Church. Manning has indeed said that he does not
+think the decree strong enough. The Spaniards agree
+with him, and an open difference on this point has
+arisen in the Deputation. The great majority would be
+glad to find a formula less offensive to the Opposition,
+but Manning has the Pope on his side, and gets him
+worked upon by certain sacristan-like natures, like the
+Bishops of Carcassonne and Belley, who have won the
+special confidence of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> through having a certain
+mental affinity with him. Manning's whole speech was
+an attempt to hinder concessions, and keep the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+to the point of forcibly suppressing the minority. And
+it counts also for a sign that the Pope is resolved to go
+all lengths. The fanatics would prefer the Church
+<pb n='583'/><anchor id='Pg583'/>
+being exposed to the danger of schism to modifying
+their theory in the least particular, for the latter would
+be a humiliation for themselves, while the other kindles
+a contest the end of which they feel no doubt about.
+It is reckoned certain that of the Bishops who will
+vote against the dogma, not all have the courage for a
+protest, and that of those who do protest some will
+rather resign their sees than undertake the contest
+with the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> under excommunication.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Manning's argument for infallibility from the condition
+of England was remarkable. It is unquestionably
+his chief motive, and what gives the stamp of
+sincerity to his position, to make Catholicism more
+compact and closely united in Protestant England. He
+hopes by means of the dogma to suppress those differences
+of opinion which are a source of disturbance and
+weakness, so that all will re-echo his words, uphold
+his theology in the face of a disintegrating Protestantism,
+and his policy in the face of political parties with
+the combined strength of five million men. He conceives
+that the Christian element is more and more disappearing
+from the Established Church and the sects of England,
+and sees a general dissolution of belief which
+offers a future to Catholicism as the one definite
+<pb n='584'/><anchor id='Pg584'/>
+authority. But he maintained in the Council that the
+English Catholics were in favour of infallibility, and that
+even Protestants testified that it would strengthen his
+hands. That the leading English theologian, Newman,
+has spoken so strongly against the definition he of
+course did not say. It was only consistent with the
+bitter enmity between the two to ignore it. Nor did
+he say that the English Bishops present at the Council
+are equally divided&mdash;himself, Ullathorne, Chadwick
+and Cornthwaite being infallibilists, against Errington,
+Clifford, Amherst, and Vaughan, who are fallibilists.
+He read extracts from Protestant papers, stating that
+papal infallibility is the logical outcome of Catholicism;
+to such miserable weapons was he driven for defending
+his cause. Clifford, who followed him, had an easy
+task in exposing these misrepresentations and falsehoods.
+One point in his speech his hearers missed: he
+said that the mischief the definition threatened the
+Church and the mischief it had already done to the
+interests of religion in England, might be gathered
+from the letter of an illustrious English statesman, for
+the authority of which he could appeal to an Archbishop
+there present. This Archbishop was Manning
+himself, and the allusion was to a letter addressed to
+<pb n='585'/><anchor id='Pg585'/>
+him by an English minister, saying in substance that in
+England it was the most vehement Protestants, and
+those most notorious for their hostility to the Catholic
+Church, who eagerly desired to see infallibility and the
+Syllabus made into dogmas, and that the present policy
+of Rome had so greatly increased the anti-Catholic feeling
+of the country that every step taken by the Government
+to extend the rights of Catholics and improve the
+social condition of Catholic Ireland met with the most
+persistent opposition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Italian Valerga, titular Patriarch of Jerusalem,
+delivered on Tuesday, May 31, a more spirited, piquant
+and insolent speech, which I will give a report of in my
+next letter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great debate may last till the middle of June,
+when it is hoped that the chapter on the primacy may
+be carried without difficulty, and the special debate on
+infallibility be brought to a successful end before the
+middle of July. But there is sure to be a lively and
+protracted discussion on the primacy, which may easily
+exhaust the patience of the majority, for the continuance
+of the present situation is a deep humiliation for
+the Pope and <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. The Opposition, whose existence
+at first was so boldly denied, and of which there was
+<pb n='586'/><anchor id='Pg586'/>
+originally only a germ in the Episcopate, subsequently
+developed in Council through the clumsy tactics of
+Rome, places the Roman See in an unwonted and what
+is thought an intolerable light. What Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> and the
+Jesuits reckoned on accomplishing, first in three weeks,
+then in four months, at Easter, at Pentecost, on the
+feast of St. Peter and St. Paul, by acclamation, by
+unanimous consent, is not done yet and seems to recede
+further and further. The Roman people are losing their
+reverence for the Pope, though they await the doctrine
+with equanimity. They say, <q>Si cambia la Religione,</q>
+and laugh good-humouredly. But I heard the words
+from the mouth of a Roman priest, <q>L'idola restera al
+Vaticano, ma l'altare serà deserto.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is certain attempts will soon be made either to cut
+short the debate or adjourn it and overcome the opposition
+by some compromise. Such an attempt was made
+before by a Cardinal, but the Bishop of the minority to
+whom he applied would not even look at the formula.
+Then the Dominicans conceived a similar idea, but were
+answered that there were strong reasons not only against
+the wording of particular forms, but against any
+reference to the question. Such proposals are sure to
+be repeated in spite of Manning and the fanatics. But
+<pb n='587'/><anchor id='Pg587'/>
+the Opposition Bishops cannot entertain them separately
+without breach of word to their colleagues, though it is
+always possible that some formula or other may find
+friends and advocates among them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rupture with France is a decisive one. In the
+first place a Bishop from the North of France has
+repeated here a conversation he had with a leading
+statesman in Paris, who said that the attitude of Rome
+was equivalent to a declaration of war against France,
+and that the Government had done everything to withhold
+the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> from its perilous course, but in vain.
+He himself opposed Count Daru's policy, as he did not
+wish to prevent what might lead to the separation of
+Church and State, but now he thought they were free
+to carry out the separation, as Rome had made it inevitable.
+The reciprocal obligations of the two Courts
+would cease, and therefore the occupation of the Roman
+States by French troops, for the spiritual power the
+Pope was aiming at was incompatible with secular
+power. At the same time the French ambassador
+uttered similar warnings here, and informed the Cardinal
+Secretary of State that he was ordered to do nothing
+more to restrain the course of events. Antonelli
+is said to have replied that he took the same view, but
+<pb n='588'/><anchor id='Pg588'/>
+had not influence enough to do anything. It is of
+course believed here that the present administration in
+Paris is not strong or firm enough to carry out a policy
+which would be more after the mind of Prince Napoleon
+than of the Emperor. But the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> underrates the
+offence given to France by the quiet contempt with
+which both Daru's notes were treated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the incense is being constantly swung
+before Pius, so that the clouds of homage conceal the
+abyss to which he is drawing on the Church. There is
+great agitation going on among the French as well as
+the Italian clergy, with a view to securing their votes
+for infallibility and also presents of money. Their expressions
+not seldom exceed in devotion to Pius everything
+of the kind ever heard of before; and it seems
+as if the old canon law sycophants had come back to
+life, who made no scruple of designating the Pope God
+and Vice-God. Let us give two examples. One of
+these true sons of the Church in Italy submits by
+anticipation to whatever Pius chooses to define, whether
+with the approval of the Council or by his own sole
+authority. Seven priests from Cuneo bring these verses&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<quote rend='display'>
+<lg>
+<l>Parla, O Gran Pio,</l>
+<l>Cio che sona il tuo labbro,</l>
+<l>Non è voce mortal, voce è di Dio.</l>
+</lg>
+</quote>
+
+<pb n='589'/><anchor id='Pg589'/>
+
+<p>
+The international Committee of the minority thought
+it necessary that a treatise should be expressly composed
+to discuss the weighty question of moral unanimity
+being required for dogmatic decrees, and Dupanloup
+has undertaken the task. He had a pamphlet on the
+subject printed at Naples and laid before the Fathers.
+He first proves from history that this condition was never
+wanting in any Councils which count as œcumenical,
+and was distinctly recognised and maintained at Trent
+by the Pope himself. He then examines the opinions
+of the chief theologians of all ages, including St. Vincent
+of Lerins and St. Augustine, and Popes Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>i.</hi>,
+Vigilius and Gregory the Great, who all agree in making
+moral unanimity an indispensable condition for a
+decree on faith. He proceeds to observe that in matters
+of discipline and canon law a numerical majority is
+enough, as decisions of that kind may be altered afterwards,
+but for a dogma there must be moral unanimity
+of the Council and the Churches to whose faith it bears
+witness, or else Catholicism would be annihilated.
+But great theologians and theological schools of former
+ages opposed papal infallibility, and it is opposed now
+by a large number of Bishops at the Vatican Council
+representing great Churches and Catholic nations. A
+<pb n='590'/><anchor id='Pg590'/>
+Council is only then infallible when the assembled
+Bishops of the whole Church bear witness to the faith
+inherited from the beginning. The majority must
+therefore either convert the minority to their views by
+free discussion or give up their design; were they to
+suppress the minority by mere brute force of numbers,
+that would be unconciliar and unprecedented in Church
+history. It is not mere probability but unquestionable
+certainty that is required for defining a dogma, and a
+considerable number of distinguished members of the
+Council have no such firm belief in papal infallibility.
+To define it in spite of this would be to act as judges
+and masters of faith, not as its depositaries and witnesses.
+A minority denying a dogma which had been
+the perpetual belief of the Church would be in the
+wrong, but not a minority repudiating the definition of
+a doctrine which had never been held an article of
+faith. Even the Pope cannot by his authority raise
+the decision of a mere majority to the dignity of a
+dogma, for he only promulgates decrees on faith <q>sacro
+approbante Concilio,</q> and without moral unanimity the
+Council has not approved. The words of the Bishop of
+Orleans are directed principally against the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>,
+which has notoriously laboured to establish the opposite
+<pb n='591'/><anchor id='Pg591'/>
+hypothesis, and he asks, <q>Are we at a Council or not?
+If we are, the rules of Councils must be observed, or else
+a great assembly of Bishops is reduced simply to playing
+the part of a theatrical exhibition.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dupanloup goes on to remark on the storms and incalculable
+evils which the definition of papal infallibility
+would bring on the Church and the Papacy. He
+concludes with these words: <q>If ever moral unanimity
+was requisite for a dogmatic decision, it is so at a Council
+like the Vatican, where there are 276 Italian Bishops,
+of whom 143 belong to the States of the Church;
+43 Cardinals, of whom 23 are not Bishops or have no
+Sees; 120 Archbishops or Bishops <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, and 51
+Abbots or Generals of Orders&mdash;while the Bishops present
+from all Catholic countries of Europe, exclusive of
+Italy, only number 265, so that the Patriarchs, Primates,
+Archbishops, and diocesan Bishops of the whole world
+are outnumbered by the diocesan Bishops of Italy
+alone.<note place='foot'>He should have said <q>the Italian prelates.</q></note> At a Council so composed a mere majority can
+never decide; and the less so when the personal intervention
+of the Pope makes itself felt, when the freedom
+of the Bishops is so seriously hampered, and in so many
+ways, when the question of infallibility has been so
+<pb n='592'/><anchor id='Pg592'/>
+unscrupulously and violently brought forward for discussion
+by a mere sovereign act&mdash;a sort of <foreign rend='italic'>coup d'état</foreign>&mdash;when
+consciences are tormented and a number of writings
+are issued which have created a great sensation
+and give evidence of the anxiety of the faithful, and
+when lastly the Bishops themselves let a cry escape
+from their tortured hearts which the whole press re-echoes.
+Under such circumstances it is impossible to
+settle the matter by a mere <foreign rend='italic'>coup</foreign> of the majority; and
+if it is done all kinds of mischief must be feared. Nor
+is it I alone who say so; there are 100 Bishops who
+say, <q>An intolerable burden would be laid on our consciences.
+We should fear that the œcumenical character
+of the Council would be called in question, and
+abundant materials supplied to the enemies of religion
+for assailing the Holy See and the Council, and that it
+would be without authority in the eyes of the Christian
+world, as having been no true and no free Council.
+And in these troubled times no greater evil can well
+be conceived.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='593'/><anchor id='Pg593'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<anchor id='Letter_LII'/>
+<head>Fifty-Second Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 3, 1870.</hi>&mdash;Valerga attacked the <q>Gallicans,</q>
+drawing a parallel between the Pope and Christ,
+and between the Fallibilists and Monothelites. As in
+Christ the human will co-existed with the divine, so in
+the Pope may personal infallibility co-exist with moral
+sinfulness, and to conclude from the former against the
+latter&mdash;to draw an argument from scandals in papal
+history against the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>privilegium inerrantiæ</foreign>&mdash;is analogous
+to the error of the Monothelites, who denied the
+possibility of a human will subject to sin co-existing
+with the divine will in the same person. Never has
+the well-known spirit of the Roman <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> shown itself
+so openly and with such technical adroitness as in this
+carefully elaborated and minute accusation against the
+Opposition. As Archbishop Purcell of Cincinnati
+expressed it, it was <q>exemplum sophismatum artis ad
+instar congestorum,</q> and great expectations might be
+<pb n='594'/><anchor id='Pg594'/>
+formed of its salutary effect on the French. Purcell
+answered shortly and pointedly that the charge applied
+equally to the Council of Trent and the sixth, seventh,
+and eighth Œcumenical Councils, and that he and his
+colleagues were content to endure the patriarch's anathema
+in such good company. Even Bellarmine quotes
+a whole cloud of witnesses against infallibilism, and
+neither he nor later writers had refuted them. It is a
+matter of thankfulness to God that he has never
+suffered this opinion to gain dogmatic authority. Purcell
+then cited clenching proofs of the public erroneous
+teaching of Popes, and among them the history of the
+ordinations and reordinations of Formosus and Sergius.
+The standpoint which he took as a republican was interesting.
+He said that the Church was the freest society
+in the world, and was loved as such by its American sons,
+for the Americans abhorred every doctrine opposed to
+civil and spiritual freedom. As kings existed for the good
+of the peoples, so Popes for the good of the Church, and
+not <foreign rend='italic'>vice versâ</foreign>. Perhaps he was thinking of the words
+of the absolutist Louis <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi>, <q>La nation ne fait pas
+corps en France, elle réside tout entière dans la personne
+du roi.</q> For <q>nation</q> put <q>Église,</q> and the
+words describe precisely the papal system, as it is now
+<pb n='595'/><anchor id='Pg595'/>
+intended to be made exclusively dominant by means
+of the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The most important speech in this sitting, and one
+of the most remarkable theologically since the opening
+of the Council, was that of Conolly, Archbishop of
+Halifax. Formerly an unhesitating adherent of personal
+infallibility he had come here without having
+specially studied the question, and under the full belief
+that the <hi rend='italic'>Allgemeine Zeitung</hi> had calumniated the
+Roman See in representing this dogma as the real
+object of the Council. But when he found what was
+expected of him here, he instituted a searching examination,
+and thoroughly sifted, as he said, what the
+classical Roman theologians cite for their favourite
+doctrine. He now frankly submitted to the Council
+the result of his studies,&mdash;that the whole of Christian
+antiquity explains the stock passages of Scripture
+alleged for papal infallibility in a different sense from
+the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, and bears witness against the theory that
+the Pope alone, without the Bishops or even in opposition
+to them (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>etiam omnibus invitis et contradicentibus</foreign>),
+is infallible. But what our Lord has not spoken, even
+though it was certain metaphysically or physically, can
+never become the basis of an article of faith, for faith
+<pb n='596'/><anchor id='Pg596'/>
+comes by hearing, and hearing is not by science, but
+by the words of Christ. It is the speciality of Catholicism
+not to interpret passages of Scripture singly and
+by mere critical exegesis, but in the light of tradition
+and in harmony with the Fathers. To found a dogma
+on the rejection of the traditional interpretation would
+be pure Protestantism. It is not therefore the words of
+Scripture simply but the true sense, as revealed by God
+and attested by the perpetual and unanimous consent
+of the Fathers, which all are pledged by oath to follow,
+that must be called the real revelation of God. To cite
+modern theologians, as Bellarmine does, is nothing to the
+purpose. I will have nothing, he said, but the indubitable
+word of God made into a dogma. The opinions
+of 10,000 theologians do not suffice me. And no theologian
+should be quoted who lived after the Isidorian
+forgeries. But no single passage of Fathers or Councils
+can be quoted from that earlier time of genuine tradition,
+which affirms the Pope's dogmatic independence
+of the rest of the Episcopate. If there be any such, let
+it be shown; but there is none, and innumerable and
+conclusive testimonies can be cited on the other side.
+Even at the Apostolic Council at Jerusalem St. James
+proved the teaching of Peter by the Prophets, and
+<pb n='597'/><anchor id='Pg597'/>
+appealed to it because it agreed with theirs and not on
+account of his authority. Conolly was ready for his part
+to believe that no Pope could wilfully and knowingly
+become heretical,&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, persistently hold out against all
+the rest of the Church; but that did not prove papal
+infallibility, and to define it would be to bring the
+Vatican Council into contradiction with the three
+Councils which condemned Honorius, to narrow the
+gates of heaven, repel the East, and proclaim not peace
+but war. To those who said, <q>Pereant populi sed promulgetur
+dogma,</q> Conolly replied that the loss of one
+soul was serious enough to outweigh all the advantages
+looked for from the new dogma. He declared, against
+Manning, that no one was justified in calling an opinion
+<q>proximate heresy</q> which the Church had not condemned
+as such; for it was a duty to follow and not to anticipate
+her sentence. A Pope had said that no one should
+censure a doctrine before the Holy See had spoken, and
+the Penitentiary had declared in 1831 that the Gallican
+Articles were not under any censure. He had worked
+thirty-three years among Protestants, and could testify
+that what Manning affirmed was the reverse of the
+truth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Conolly is a man who is on the whole in tolerable
+<pb n='598'/><anchor id='Pg598'/>
+harmony with Roman views, but who is therefore all the
+more resolved to vote against infallibility. While he forbids
+the Gallican doctrine being taught in his diocese, he
+protests here against the Roman. There is evidently a
+process going on in his mind, which in so cultivated
+a theologian can have but one result. He ended by
+declaring that he would accept the definition if the
+Council proclaimed it, for he was convinced that God
+was among them. But that merely meant that he was
+convinced the dogma would never be proclaimed. On
+the strength of that conviction he was almost the first
+speaker who briefly but decisively maintained the
+doctrine to be untenable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yesterday, Thursday, Vancsa, Bishop of Fogarasch, of
+the Greek Rite, quoted the testimonies of Greek Fathers
+against infallibility, and his speech was thought a remarkable
+one. Dreux-Brézé of Moulins followed him,
+and again had the misfortune immediately to precede
+Strossmayer. He contended that, as the Pope is
+supreme teacher, and the French call him <q>Souverain
+Pontife,</q> and he is the highest judge, he must be infallible.
+As Vicar of Christ, he is also king, for Christ
+said to Pilate, <q>Thou rightly callest me king,</q> and the
+royal title was affixed to the cross. But if Christ was
+<pb n='599'/><anchor id='Pg599'/>
+infallible as king, so is the Pope. He supported all this
+by texts of Scripture, and spoke against the Fathers
+who accused the Pope of despotism or maintained that
+the new dogma would be the formal introduction of the
+grossest despotism. Without the Pope, who is <q>Episcopus
+universalis,</q> and can seldom exercise his office on
+account of the number of the faithful and of his labours,
+the Bishops have no jurisdiction, and cannot even
+absolve without powers derived from him. <q>Let us
+therefore go on,</q> he concluded, <q>to unity and agreement,
+and give Cæsar what belongs to Cæsar, and the Pope
+what belongs to the Pope.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strossmayer followed him, and declared that papal
+infallibility was against the constitution of the Church,
+the rights of the Bishops and Councils, and the immutable
+rule of faith. He explained the constitution of
+the Church according to the holy Fathers and especially
+St. Cyprian (<hi rend='italic'>De Unitate Ecclesiæ</hi>), who did not hold
+their jurisdiction to be limited to their dioceses, since
+by virtue of their character they often had to exercise
+authority in the concerns of the universal Church, and
+were obliged to do so, as, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, in Councils. This sharing
+of authority and rights between the Pope and the Episcopate
+was evident from the controversy between Pope
+<pb n='600'/><anchor id='Pg600'/>
+Stephen and Cyprian in the third century about the
+rebaptism of heretics, in which the latter did not the
+least admit any personal and absolute infallibility
+bestowed on the Pope by our Lord. And St. Augustine
+defended him on the ground that the question had
+not yet been decided by a General Council, which shows
+that the sole authority in matters of faith and morals
+was in his opinion a General Council, united with its
+head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strossmayer took this opportunity of vindicating the
+French Church admirably from the calumnies and
+attacks of the Patriarch of Jerusalem. He complained
+indignantly of a Church which had come forth pure and
+victorious from the bitterest persecution, and which
+boasted such great martyrs and confessors, being slandered
+by the comparison of so-called Gallicanism to
+Monothelitism, and of those great men being libelled
+who during life had rendered such conspicuous services
+to the Church of God, as well as their successors who
+had made wonderful and exceptional sacrifices for
+the Church and the Holy See. Strossmayer blamed
+the Patriarch's vague and general statements about the
+constitution of the Church, and advised him to bring
+arguments from positive tradition, which were alone of
+<pb n='601'/><anchor id='Pg601'/>
+any decisive force. He proceeded to insist on the
+power and necessity of General Councils, especially in
+our days, and he proved the necessity of their being
+frequently held from the conduct of the Apostles, from
+the holy Fathers, and from the Councils of Constance
+and Trent. But if once the personal infallibility of the
+Pope were defined, Councils would become superfluous
+and useless, and the Bishops would be robbed of their
+authority as witnesses and judges of faith. In the one
+way the greatest injury would be done to the prosperity
+of the Church, and in the other the rights of
+Bishops would be reduced to a mere assent, so that
+they would hardly any longer be consultors and theologians;
+but this would be clearly against the unchangeable
+constitution of the Church and the usage
+of Councils, as for instance that of Chalcedon, where
+the Bishops most unmistakeably exercised the office
+of judges as regarded the Letter of Pope Leo. The
+Bishops could make no such concession without betraying
+their authority, and casting a slur on their predecessors
+at the Council of Trent, who are well known to
+have so emphatically vindicated their freedom and
+rights, when the two words <q>proponentibus Legatis</q>
+were inserted by the Legates against their will. And
+<pb n='602'/><anchor id='Pg602'/>
+the speaker praised the wisdom of the Council of Trent
+in resolving to abstain from deciding any questions
+which might give occasion for discord or for prejudicing
+the rights and freedom of the Bishops.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the last part of his speech Strossmayer discussed
+the Catholic rule of faith, which had been completely
+changed and violated by the comments of the members
+of the Deputation of Faith on the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>. The principle
+of at least moral unanimity was, he said, a sacred
+one, corresponding to precedent and pleasing to the faithful.
+There were whole volumes of the holy Fathers extant
+on this principle, as of Irenæus, Tertullian, Augustine
+and Vincent of Lerins, who in common with all others
+maintained that there are three essential conditions for
+proving a divine tradition and propounding an article of
+faith, antiquity, universality and agreement. They all
+thought the tradition of the Roman Church a principal
+river, whereby the whole earth was watered, but they
+regarded the traditions of the other Churches also as
+tributaries by which the river must be constantly fed,
+or it would in course of time be dried up. They all
+ascribed the first authority to the witness of St. Peter's
+successor, but that authority was only manifested
+clearly to the Catholic world after being reinforced by
+<pb n='603'/><anchor id='Pg603'/>
+the consent of all the other Churches. This divine
+rule would be completely overset by the personal infallibility
+of the Pope, to the great injury of faith. If it
+is said that the definition is earnestly desired by many,
+it must be replied that it is also desired by the worst
+enemies of the Church, who openly say in writing and
+by word of mouth that it is the best means for destroying
+the infallibility of the Church. That fact alone would
+explain the alarm and anxiety of so many of the most
+learned Fathers of the Council. Strossmayer dwelt in
+conclusion on the danger that would result from the
+definition for the Southern Sclaves and Catholic Croats,
+who lived side by side with eight million persons out of
+the unity of the Church. Not only would the return
+of these separated brethren be barred, but it might be
+feared that the Catholic Croats would be driven out of the
+Church. He therefore always hoped, and entreated the
+holy Father, that he would emulate the example of the
+humility of St. Peter in his martyrdom, and of Christ
+who was exalted by his Father because He had humbled
+Himself to the death of the Cross, and magnanimously
+have the subject withdrawn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The speech was listened to with great attention, and
+became the topic of conversation in all circles at Rome,
+<pb n='604'/><anchor id='Pg604'/>
+and even Bishops of the other party paid a high tribute
+to it. As yet 24 Bishops have spoken against the
+dogma and 35 for it,&mdash;most of the latter having no real
+dioceses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two interesting episodes have intervened. Last week
+the police refused the Prince Bishop of Breslau his <foreign rend='italic'>visa</foreign>
+for Naples, because he could show no permission from
+the Presidents of the Council to go there. This implied
+that the Fathers are civil as well as spiritual subjects of
+the Pope. The Bishop, who was wearied out with the
+objectless proceedings in the Council Hall, sent to
+Fessler, the Secretary of the Council, for the requisite
+permission; Fessler replied that he could not give it,
+and referred him to the President de Angelis, who tried
+to represent the whole affair as a mistake. It had not
+been so ill meant, and at most only the departure of the
+Orientals was intended to be prevented, he said, and
+he authorized Fessler to instruct the police to give
+the permission. But that was the most complete indorsing
+of what they had done, and proved that the
+Pope meant to use his temporal power for managing
+the Council and controlling the actions of the Fathers.
+On that account the departure of the Prince Bishop
+had been hindered, and the whole affair involves the
+<pb n='605'/><anchor id='Pg605'/>
+question of ecclesiastical freedom and international
+right. Does a member of the Council thereby lose or
+prejudice his rights as the subject of a foreign state, or
+is the freedom of individual Bishops suspended while
+taking part in it? So anxious is the Pope to give up
+nothing which may serve for dominating the Council,
+that he restricts the Bishops in the most harmless
+exercise of personal freedom, which at other times he
+would never have thought of. I will not dwell on the
+insult in this procedure to the King of Prussia, whose
+safe-conduct was no more respected than the Emperor
+Sigismund's at Constance, for a graver question is at
+stake,&mdash;that of international right and freedom of the
+Council. Meanwhile they reckon on Prussia taking no
+further notice of the affair, and the Prince Bishop has
+given up his journey after these difficulties. France,
+too, has quietly endured a series of insults, and so they
+hope not to have to abolish the regulation or disavow
+the police.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rome cannot admit the principle of international
+right in this case, without giving up one of her own
+principles, the Inquisition, according to whose laws
+foreigners can be arrested, imprisoned, and put to the
+question. No secular tribunal limits its power, and
+<pb n='606'/><anchor id='Pg606'/>
+every Bishop therefore could in theory be brought
+before it. By papal law the Pope might at any moment
+have Cardinal Schwarzenberg arrested, and if the right
+has become inapplicable, that is due to the influence of
+foreign states and the modern spirit, whose restraints
+on the full exercise of Church authority it is the office
+of the Council to remove, as the Syllabus, Bull of
+Censures, <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi>, etc., prove. According
+to Roman canon law, freedom at the Council is inconceivable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a former letter I gave an inaccurate account of the
+Prince Bishop's conduct towards the priest Jentsch, at
+Liegnitz, being misled by statements in the Roman
+newspapers.<note place='foot'>Cf. <hi rend='italic'>supr.</hi> p. <ref target='Pg517'>517</ref>.</note> The text of the explanation accepted by
+the Bishop shows that no principle was conceded or
+denied, and he said himself that he agreed in substance
+with Jentsch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The arrival of Father Hötzl in Rome seemed for a
+time likely to produce still more serious conflicts, for
+his affair looked as if it would oblige the minority to
+give expression to their view of Döllinger's teaching on
+the necessity of general consent for the œcumenicity
+of a Council. Those who had undertaken the instruction
+<pb n='607'/><anchor id='Pg607'/>
+of Hötzl cared less for converting him
+than for using the opportunity to provoke dissension
+among the minority. He was told that an explanation,
+not a retractation, was all that was demanded
+of him, and when the explanation he offered was found
+unsatisfactory another was proposed to him on May 31.
+The crucial passage in it was read and examined by
+leading bishops of the minority, whose names were calculated
+to inspire complete confidence. Hötzl had
+some cause to think he had saved honour and conscience,
+and responsibility to man and God, when he
+sought the judgment of liberal German Bishops and
+resolved to abide by it. But though they disliked the
+passage, they thought it difficult to know how to save a
+man who had come to Rome in such childish confidence,
+and did not feel justified under the circumstances in
+urging him to go to extremities and sacrifice himself to
+their interests. It was not their place to drive him to
+a breach with his Order or a loss of personal liberty, at
+a time when they had not themselves publicly, solemnly
+and decisively repudiated the doctrine imposed on him.
+Still less did they want to compromise themselves or
+break up their harmony before the time. And their
+hesitation may have led Father Hötzl into his mistake;
+<pb n='608'/><anchor id='Pg608'/>
+he was acting in concert with the minority when he
+signed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I give only a brief preliminary notice of the most
+important points in to-day's sitting. After Dinkel, who
+spoke very well, and Domenec, Bishop of Pittsburg,
+who was much interrupted, Maret made a longer
+speech, which he delivered in a very loud voice, as deaf
+persons are apt to do. In the course of it he declared
+that it would be called a vicious circle for the less to
+give power to the greater, as would be done if the
+Council, which was said to possess a lower authority,
+were to confer on the Pope&mdash;a higher authority&mdash;the
+prerogative of infallibility. Thereupon Bilio struck in
+very excitedly, crying out <q>Concilium nihil dat Papæ
+nec dare potest, sed solummodo recognoscit, suffragia
+dat, et Sanctus Pater quod in Spiritu Sancto ipsi placet
+decidit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In yesterday's sitting a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>postulatum</foreign> for the close of
+the general debate was prepared, which is said to have
+received 150 signatures. After Maret's speech it was
+at once produced and the close voted. Little more
+than 60 prelates have spoken, and above 40 were waiting
+their turn, amongst whom were Haynald and other
+considerable persons. The continuation of the debate
+<pb n='609'/><anchor id='Pg609'/>
+had been reckoned upon and much was hoped from it;
+but now that the example has once been set of using
+the well-known clause in the order of business in the
+interests of one party, the step may be repeated in
+every succeeding debate. The Opposition will be
+driven into greater firmness by this occurrence, which
+they had foreshadowed in the half-threatening formula
+at the end of their great Protest. The question is now
+forced upon them, whether they were in earnest in
+what they then said.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='610'/><anchor id='Pg610'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifty-Third Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 4, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The first impression made on
+the minority by the violent closing of the general
+debate led many of them, in discussing it directly after
+the sitting, to say they would take no further part in
+the debates. A great meeting was arranged for to-day
+at Cardinal Rauscher's to decide the question. It was
+the largest international gathering of the Opposition
+yet held, including nearly 80 Bishops, but was for that
+very reason difficult to manage. Two possible courses
+were discussed&mdash;to remain in Rome but take no further
+part in the debates, as not being free, and vote at the
+end <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>non placet</foreign> against the infallibilist <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, or simply
+to issue a protest against the injustice they had suffered,
+and continue to take part in the proceedings. The
+former view was supported principally by the Hungarians,
+North Americans, the leading French Bishops,
+and men like Strossmayer, Simor, Haynald, Darboy,
+<pb n='611'/><anchor id='Pg611'/>
+Dupanloup, Clifford, Conolly (represented by proxy),
+and others. They insisted that words were of no further
+avail, and they should show their sense of the want of
+freedom by acts, so that, as far as in them lay, no
+decree should be carried which had not been thoroughly
+discussed. In this way the œcumenicity of the Council
+would be denied without coming as yet to a breach
+in Council or a disturbance in the Church; for they
+could no longer recognise the Council as legitimate,
+nor yet retire, for to retire would precipitate the most
+extravagant decisions and lead to an open conflict.
+There were many reasons why it could no longer be
+held legitimate, such as its composition, the order of
+business, the pressure exercised on the Bishops by the
+Pope personally or through his officials, the notorious
+design of getting dogmas promulgated by a majority,
+etc. It would be simply a degradation to give in any
+longer to such a farce. In Parliaments speeches were
+not altogether useless, for if they could not influence
+votes they enlightened public opinion, but at this
+so-called Council most of their hearers were quite
+incapable from their standard of cultivation of appreciating
+theological arguments, not to add that the moral
+standard of many among them was such that, even if
+<pb n='612'/><anchor id='Pg612'/>
+they were convinced, they would not act on their convictions.
+And speeches, which were not made public,
+could produce no effect out of doors. To debate under
+these circumstances would only be to incur a large
+responsibility for the entire conduct of the Council.
+But if the Opposition refrained from discussion and
+left the field free to the majority, the differences among
+them would soon be made manifest. The <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> could
+hardly hold out against so serious a demonstration, but
+if it remained obstinate, no further doubt would be
+possible in the Church as to the opinion of the minority
+about the Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the other side it was urged that all which could
+be gained by such a demonstration would be gained
+equally by a declaration showing how the forcible closing
+of the general debate had undermined the foundations
+and future authority of the Council. They owed
+it to the world to do more than merely give reasons
+against the legitimacy of the Council; they must
+debate and bring forward the objections to the infallibilist
+doctrine itself, and thus give public testimony of
+their convictions. Most of the Germans took this view,
+which many French Bishops readily acceded to, when
+they observed that the Hungarian phalanx had been
+<pb n='613'/><anchor id='Pg613'/>
+broken up. Perhaps other and more subordinate motives
+helped to establish this opinion, but many of its
+advocates are men of no decided resolution, and men
+who in reality want only a semblance of resistance and
+are already secretly prepared to yield at the last
+moment. It was thought strange that at this assembly,
+which had been summoned to consult on the means of
+meeting the violent <foreign rend='italic'>coup</foreign> of the majority, a German
+Archbishop was present who had joined the enemies
+of his party in subscribing the proposal for closing the
+debate the day before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The draft of the Protest finally adopted against this
+act of violence had been brought to the meeting by
+Cardinal Rauscher, and bears marks of the antagonistic
+elements it combines. Yet it contains one passage,
+which may perhaps be appealed to hereafter,
+<q>Protestamur contra violationem nostri juris.</q><note place='foot'>It will be seen from the protest afterwards published that this passage
+was greatly toned down.</note>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='614'/><anchor id='Pg614'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifty-Fourth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 6, 1870.</hi>&mdash;There have been indications
+for some time past that the <foreign rend='italic'>dénouement</foreign> was likely to be
+precipitated. The Pope himself declared that it was
+impossible to keep the Bishops here in July. The
+great debate, with 106 speakers inscribed, wearied every
+one, and the tropical heat increases the exhaustion and
+disgust. But the minority maintained their resolve to
+carry on the general debate to the end, while the
+majority counted on its absorbing the discussion of the
+separate chapters of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, and accordingly Fessler
+announced that the speakers were at liberty to treat of
+points which belonged properly to the special debate.
+His party considered that, if the general and special
+debate were mixed up in this way, they might insist at
+the end that the separate chapters required no further
+discussion, since everything had been said already, and
+so they might come sooner to the decision they so
+earnestly desired. Very few speakers have attempted
+<pb n='615'/><anchor id='Pg615'/>
+any theological argument&mdash;perhaps only Conolly, Dinkel
+and Maret; and this made it easier to mix up the
+general and special discussion, which again has helped
+to give a vague and rambling character to the debate.
+It was clear that after 106 or more speeches on the
+preliminary question, there were still five weary debates
+to come on the preamble and each of the four chapters,
+so that, unless the discussion was to be forcibly closed,
+it must either last on through the whole summer, or a
+prorogation be allowed while the main question was
+still unsettled. The first expedient seemed hardly practicable,
+and could only be held out <foreign rend='italic'>in terrorem</foreign>, so that
+the Court really had to choose between an act of arbitrary
+power or a prorogation of the Council, which last
+would be equivalent to a great victory of the minority.
+There was no want of attempts to get up an agitation
+for an adjournment. It seemed a happy escape from
+grave embarrassments to those secular and untheological
+counsellors of the Pope, who have given up the notion
+of infallibility, and on the contrary are convinced that
+the definition involves the separation of Church and
+State, the fall of the temporal power and the loss of
+the accustomed resources of the Papacy. These men
+do not expect an isle of Delos to rise out of the sea for
+<pb n='616'/><anchor id='Pg616'/>
+the Pope when the States of the Church are swallowed
+up, but they are excluded from any influence on the
+Council. The more full the Pope is of the one grand
+subject of his infallibility, the less will he listen to
+Antonelli, to whom the mysteries in which he is not
+initiated are a nuisance, and who hates the line taken
+by Manning and the French zealots and apostolic Janissaries,
+and would like nothing better than an ambiguous
+formula leaving things just where they are.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as soon as the majority became aware that some
+of the more colourless Bishops of the middle party
+were working for the prorogation of the Council, they
+resolved to be beforehand with them. Their <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>postulatum</foreign>
+for closing the debate with its 150 signatures was
+got ready on Thursday the 2d, but was not meant to be
+presented till the Saturday. But the great excitement
+at the close of Maret's speech gave them the opportunity
+for striking the blow on Friday, when the close of the
+general debate was carried by a large majority. The
+order of business undoubtedly gave the Presidents the
+right of putting it to the vote, and moreover they have
+more than the letter of the law on their side. They
+might have urged that, as the general and special
+debates were not kept separate, most of what was now
+<pb n='617'/><anchor id='Pg617'/>
+omitted might be supplied afterwards, and the Fathers
+who had missed their turn would have five other
+opportunities of speaking. They might have also
+alleged, in excuse of hurrying the proceedings, the
+constantly growing impatience and disgust generally
+manifested in the assembly, and the uselessness of all
+minute discussion of details. It is enough to mention
+as indicative of the prevalent feeling of the majority,
+that they received the Bishop of Pittsburg with derisive
+laughter when he ascended the tribune, and that they
+muttered at every affectionate or respectful allusion to
+the Pope by an Opposition speaker, <q>Et osculatus est
+Illum.</q><note place='foot'>Matt. xxvi. 49.</note> Under these circumstances Conolly omitted
+nearly half his manuscript. The majority might have
+urged the further excuse that far more of their own
+speakers than of their opponents were excluded by the
+close of the debate. Some 27 of the latter had as yet
+spoken against 36 infallibilists, which however, considering
+that the minority are only a fourth of the
+Council, tells in their favour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But if we examine the matter more closely, the Opposition
+has lost all it had left by the close of the general
+debate, viz., freedom of speech. It has been sacrificed
+<pb n='618'/><anchor id='Pg618'/>
+to the caprice of the majority, for the subsequent
+debates may be closed in the same way: that on the
+primacy because it is no new subject, and that on infallibility
+because the general debate turned wholly
+upon it. So the Opposition had nothing left them but
+to protest, unless they would summon courage for a
+decisive act. But their protest is as feeble as the last;
+it is simply directed against the abuse of an order of
+business they had already protested against, and then
+themselves accepted by continuing to take part in the
+Council. A party intoxicated with success cannot be
+restrained or conquered by these paper demonstrations,
+nor even the sympathy of the Catholic world be
+gained; a definite and firm principle is requisite for
+that. After all their experiences it may be called a
+harmless amusement for the minority to present protest
+after protest, with the certainty that they will be laid
+by unnoticed and unanswered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French Bishops of the minority held a meeting
+on the 3rd, from which they came away troubled and
+undecided. The Germans take the matter less seriously.
+Their past presses heavily upon them. They had an
+opportunity, when the second <foreign rend='italic'>regolamento</foreign> was issued at
+the end of February, and again at the Solemn Session
+<pb n='619'/><anchor id='Pg619'/>
+at the end of April, of either getting their views accepted
+or bringing the Council to an end. But they
+were not then strong enough for that. Now at the
+eleventh hour a last though less favourable opportunity
+is offered them. But at the international meeting at
+Cardinal Rauscher's last Saturday, their views were
+again set aside, for the assemblage of the whole body of
+Opposition Bishops brought to light the unpleasant
+fact of a gulf between the intellectual leaders and the
+mass of the minority, which makes any real leadership
+impossible. And this is the more lamentable, because
+the men who since the opening of the Council have
+risen to so important a position were almost unanimous;
+for Hefele and Rivet, Bishop of Dijon, were almost the
+only ones among them, except Ketteler, who rejected
+the energetic measure of holding aloof from the debates
+for the future and protesting by silence. It seems that
+Hefele wanted to recognise the Council as still having
+some claim. The other leaders succumbed, unwillingly
+and predicting evils, to the will of the majority, who
+were satisfied with the protest drawn up by Rauscher.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But all is not yet lost, and the tactics actually adopted
+may perhaps in skilful hands be made as effective as
+the rejected policy. Between Pentecost and the feast
+<pb n='620'/><anchor id='Pg620'/>
+of the Apostles from 80 to 90 speakers might make
+their voices heard. If we consider that more than 100
+speakers had enrolled their names for the first and
+tolerably irregular debate, and that 49 speeches were
+suppressed, it is clear that the great question of the
+primacy and infallibility of the Pope would require a
+much longer time for uninterrupted and complete discussion,
+and thus the adjournment would remain as
+probable and as inevitable as before. The Court and
+the majority would perhaps shrink from depriving the
+proceedings of all dignity, weight and completeness by
+a fresh <foreign rend='italic'>coup d'église</foreign>, as such an attempt might appear
+even to them too bold and dangerous in the special
+debate on the principles of the Church. And if such
+an attempt was made, it would perhaps exhaust at last
+even the patience of the patient Germans, and lead
+them to muster all their forces for the last contest.
+One must admit that if orthodox Catholicism is only
+to be saved by an adjournment of the Council this is
+not much to the credit of the Church. But the reason
+why so many prefer a prorogation to a decisive conflict
+is because they fear that many present opponents of the
+doctrine might at last vote for its definition and betray
+their consciences through fear of men, and that many
+<pb n='621'/><anchor id='Pg621'/>
+who vote against it and insist on the necessity of
+unanimity would ultimately accept and teach a dogma
+false in itself and carried by illegitimate means.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I will merely mention, in illustration of this, that
+it was lately thought very necessary to distribute a
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Disquisitio Moralis de Officio Episcoporum</foreign>, discussing
+whether a Bishop does not greatly violate his conscience
+by voting for a decree to define the personal and independent
+infallibility of the Pope, without having any
+previous conviction of its being a revealed doctrine
+always held and handed down in the Church as such.
+The treatise is well written, but no such bitter irony
+against the Episcopate is contained in the pasquinades,
+and it is obvious that the author has not underrated
+their weakness from the fact that many Bishops
+would vote differently if the voting was secret. There
+are some among them too who doubt if papal absolutism
+and a power which kills out all intellectual movement
+is not better than truth and purity of doctrine, and if
+the responsibility of individual Bishops is not superseded
+by a decree of the Pope, at least when issued
+<q>sacro approbante Concilio.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To judge from to-day's debate on the preamble, one
+would imagine the Opposition neither knew how to
+<pb n='622'/><anchor id='Pg622'/>
+speak nor how to keep silence. None but the French,
+who have put down their names to speak, appear to
+have much desire to take any further part in the
+discussion. Perhaps they think it ludicrous to take
+any serious part in a debate which may be suddenly
+broken off, and speak, as it were, with a halter round
+their necks. And those who had thought the right
+plan was to keep silence henceforth were the best
+speakers of the Opposition; they do not therefore fall
+readily into a policy they disapproved. Their view is
+that, as the majority has done its worst and the minority
+has not the spirit to follow the counsel of its leaders,
+it is no longer worth while to fight against a result
+which cannot be permanent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This weak and vacillating attitude may possibly only
+be a momentary consequence of the sudden commencement
+of a discussion which seemed distant and for
+which they were unprepared. On the other hand the
+confidence of the majority increases, and they announce
+the close of the debate on Corpus Christi. If the
+minority remain as undecided as they were at the Conference
+at Cardinal Rauscher's, an unfavourable issue
+must be feared, and this will be their own fault, for sacrificing
+their cause at the very moment they have for six
+<pb n='623'/><anchor id='Pg623'/>
+months been preparing for, through some of them not
+choosing to be silent and the others not choosing to
+speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The main argument urged against taking further
+part in the discussion is that the historical and traditional
+evidences against infallibility had been prepared
+by men who lost their turn through the closing
+of the general debate, and cannot be brought forward
+in the special debate which is only about changes in
+the text of the decree. The majority have thereby
+testified their refusal to listen, not to certain speakers,
+but to a certain portion of the theological argument, and
+thus they prevent the investigation of tradition which
+is so unwelcome to them. Only secondary matters can
+be discussed now, while the main point is left untouched.
+To many, and especially the Hungarians, this seemed
+a betraying of the cause. The Hungarians absolutely
+refuse to take any further part in the debates, for in
+their eyes the Council has already condemned itself,
+and they cannot too soon publish their opinion to the
+world by recording their <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>non placet</foreign>. They are therefore
+dissatisfied with the Germans, who prevented
+stronger measures being adopted, and some of them&mdash;like
+Simor, who would not go on attending the sittings&mdash;have
+<pb n='624'/><anchor id='Pg624'/>
+even refused to sign the Protest to the Pope,
+because it involves too much deference to the Council.
+There are accordingly only 81 signatures, for the
+Archbishop of Cologne has also refused to sign, but on
+grounds precisely opposite to those of the Archbishop
+of Gran.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the Vicar-General here is organizing all
+sorts of demonstrations for the happy result of the Council
+in the sense of the Court party. There were to be
+three processions this week, and no pains were spared
+to induce persons of rank, including ladies, to take part
+in them. In many cases the attempt failed, for it is
+idle to deny that a large portion of the Roman citizens
+of all ranks turn away with indifference and contempt
+from St. Peter's, and of course from all religion too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <hi rend='italic'>Unita Cattolica</hi> predicts with triumphant confidence
+that God will yield to their pious importunities
+(<foreign rend='italic'>Iddio obbedira</foreign>), the Holy Ghost will fill the Council
+Hall, descend upon each of the Fathers and work the
+miracle of making them all boldly confess the infallibilist
+doctrine. As in the year 33 the people, who
+surrounded the house where the Pentecostal miracle
+was wrought, asked, in amazement at the new
+tongues of the Apostles, <q>Are these who speak Galileans?</q>
+<pb n='625'/><anchor id='Pg625'/>
+so in 1870 they will hear the Bishops and
+Cardinals proclaim papal infallibility and will ask
+themselves, <q>Are not these the men who wrote as
+zealous Gallicans?</q> The Spirit of God will work this
+<q>noisy miracle</q> (<foreign rend='italic'>strepitoso miracolo</foreign>).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A remarkable Petition has for some time been hawked
+about, begging the Pope to promote St. Joseph to be
+General Protector of the Catholic Church. Many have
+objected that it is unfair to disturb the <q>riposo di San
+Giuseppe,</q> but the notion finds much favour in the
+Vatican.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is impossible to foresee at this moment how the
+great decision will turn out. The majority are evidently
+consolidating their plans, and the argument may be
+heard among them that, if papal infallibility were an
+error, the devil would not have stirred up the war which
+is being carried on against it. But one may still always
+assume that 120 Bishops will say <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>, unless
+some miserable formula of compromise is hit upon.
+But the real decision will be when the Pope determines
+to ignore these 120 opponents and proceed to
+the order of the day.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='626'/><anchor id='Pg626'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifty-Fifth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 10, 1870.</hi>&mdash;If we look at the many minor
+subdivisions of the two great parties and consider the
+individual differences even within that narrower circle,
+it is impossible to form any approximately sure conjecture
+about the immediate issue of the contest. All are
+agreed that the definition must be attempted or the
+Council prorogued within the next few weeks, and
+many Bishops are already preparing for departure.
+The majority, with Manning at its head, insists on the
+dogma being defined, however numerous and strong
+the minority may prove, as being the very way to
+exhibit most clearly the power and right of the Pope
+to make a new article of faith with only a fraction of
+the Council; and there can be no doubt that the Pope
+inclines decidedly to this view himself. He is so completely
+in the hands of the Jesuits that he will not
+<pb n='627'/><anchor id='Pg627'/>
+listen to counsellors like, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, Antonelli, who makes no
+secret in his confidential intercourse of the fact that he
+has lost all influence in the matter and has no opinion
+to give. The Pope's feeling towards the Opposition,
+and especially towards its leaders, grows more bitter
+every day. Strossmayer he regards as the mere head
+of a sect (<foreign rend='italic'>caposetta</foreign>), and he termed another German
+Cardinal and Archbishop the other day <q>quell' asino.</q>
+The Jesuits make capital out of this disposition of
+Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> for effecting the ruin of all the men of the old
+school who yet remain to him from his earlier and
+more liberal days, while he leaves no stone unturned to
+win over wavering Bishops to the infallibilist side. He
+tried to work on the Portuguese lately by a visit, on
+which a French prelate observed, <q>On n'a plus de
+scrupules, ce qu'on fait pour gagner les voix, c'est
+un horreur. Il n'y a jamais rieu eu de pareil dans
+l'Église.</q> The most urgent next to Manning is Deschamps.
+He has proposed canons anathematizing all
+those Bishops who claim a share for the Episcopate
+in the sovereign rights of the Church&mdash;a measure
+expressly aimed at the Opposition and the views
+professed by Maret both in his book and in the
+Council.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='628'/><anchor id='Pg628'/>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile some differences have arisen among the
+majority, branching off at last into what may be called
+a middle party. Even Pie of Poitiers is no longer
+altogether in accord with Manning and Deschamps,
+and Fessler said lately that a definition could not be
+carried against 80 dissentient votes. This party disapproves
+Bilio's treatment of Maret, which is disowned
+by Cardinal de Luca, who in other respects often speaks
+openly against Manning. Others, including Cardinals,
+say plainly in reference to the minority Bishops that the
+Papacy is threatened with destruction. The definition
+must, if possible, be prevented by proroguing the Council,
+and, failing that, the difficulties must be evaded by
+an ambiguous formula. The prelates who speak thus
+are too sober-minded not to perceive the political dangers
+the new dogma would bring with it. They not only
+think the price too high, but they dread being themselves
+reduced by the definition under the intolerable
+dominion of the Jesuit party. They frequently confer
+with members of the Opposition with the view of
+devising a compromise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French Opposition Bishops have lately had
+another meeting and resolved to continue to take part
+in the debates. The little misunderstanding between
+<pb n='629'/><anchor id='Pg629'/>
+them and the Hungarians has quite disappeared, and
+several of the latter&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, Simor&mdash;are said to be again
+disposed to speak. And it is thought that many
+speeches, suppressed by the violent closing of the
+general discussion, will be delivered at the supreme
+moment in the debate on the fourth chapter of the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, which deals with infallibility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The debate on the separate chapters has reached as
+far as the third section <q>on the meaning and nature
+of the Roman primacy.</q> As twenty-six speakers are
+inscribed the discussion may last to the middle of next
+month, and then will immediately follow the debate on
+the fourth and most important chapter, which a great
+number are likely to take part in, and there will be no
+want of amendments. Conolly will propose the formula
+that the Pope is infallible <q>as head of the Church
+teaching with him</q> (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>tanquam caput Ecclesiæ secum
+docentis</foreign>), while others, as Dupanloup and Rauscher,
+will reproduce the formula of St. Antoninus of Florence,
+declaring the Pope infallible when he follows the judgment
+of the Universal Church, <q>utens consilio,</q> or
+<q>accipiens consilium Universalis Ecclesiæ.</q> This
+amendment is said to have been seriously discussed
+in the sitting of the Deputation on Faith on June 8,
+<pb n='630'/><anchor id='Pg630'/>
+though it amounts to pure Gallicanism, for Antoninus
+says plainly (about 1450), <q>In concernentibus fidem
+Concilium est supra Papam.</q> It is certain that the
+Deputation will labour to make some changes in the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> in view of the Opposition. Lastly, men like
+Strossmayer press for an unambiguous denial of the
+personal infallibility of the Pope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The more recklessly the Court party are resolved to
+advance, and the less they care for the destruction of
+the Church which must result from a decree irregularly
+enacted, the more are the Opposition disturbed at this
+prospect, and often made irresolute, but these are only
+passing moments of temptation. <q>Conscience before
+everything,</q> said a German Bishop to me the other
+day, who was weighed down by his gloomy views of
+the future of the Church. Even men who are infallibilists
+at heart speak of the terrible crisis in the Church,
+and think only God can save her. The most decided
+I meet are the Hungarians.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the present debates from four to five speeches are
+delivered at each sitting. The most remarkable were
+those of Landriot and Dupanloup. The Presidents are
+very ready to interrupt, as Bilio did when Verot, Bishop
+of Savannah, was speaking on the preamble. Verot,
+<pb n='631'/><anchor id='Pg631'/>
+who is a man of high character but very singular,
+submitted and left the tribune, saying, <q>Humiliter me
+subjicio.</q> This conduct might suggest to the Presidents
+that the definition would be hastened by a second
+grand interruption.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='632'/><anchor id='Pg632'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifty-Sixty Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 11, 1870.</hi>&mdash;If the new article of faith is
+accepted and proclaimed throughout the Catholic world,
+what will be its retrospective force? On what decisions
+and doctrines of previous Popes will it set the
+seal of infallibility? What amplifications and corrections
+of Catholic theology will it involve? These
+questions are naturally raised here, not indeed by the
+Bishops of the majority but by many of the Opposition;
+only no one is in a position to give even an approximately
+accurate answer from want of the necessary
+books, and the Court party reckoned on this <q>penuria
+librorum,</q> which Cardinal Rauscher has already complained
+of. A German theologian who had previously
+examined and studied the subject, undertook to answer
+the anxious question of the Bishops, and I send you his
+collection, which makes no claim to completeness, as a
+<pb n='633'/><anchor id='Pg633'/>
+not unimportant contribution to the history of the
+Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Jesuit Schrader, who is the most considerable
+theologian of his Order since Passaglia's retirement, and
+who has been employed both before and during the
+Council for drawing up the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schemata</foreign>, on account of
+the special confidence reposed in him by the Pope, has
+shown, in his great work on <hi rend='italic'>Roman Unity</hi>,<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Von der Römischen Einheit</hi>, Wien. 1866, vol. ii. pp. 444 <hi rend='italic'>seq.</hi></note> that, as
+soon as papal infallibility resting on divine guidance
+and inspiration is made into an article of faith, it must
+by logical necessity include all public ordinances,
+decrees and decisions of the Popes. For every one of
+these is indissolubly connected with their teaching
+office, and contains, whatever be its particular subject,
+a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>doctrina veritatis</foreign> either moral or religious. Papal
+infallibility is not a robe of office which can be put on
+for certain occasions and then laid aside again. The
+Pope is infallible, because he is, in the fullest sense of
+the word, the representative of Christ on earth, and like
+Christ he teaches and proclaims the truth by his acts as
+well as his words; in short no public act or direction
+of his can be conceived of as not having a doctrinal
+significance. And thus Catholic theology and morality
+<pb n='634'/><anchor id='Pg634'/>
+will be enriched by the new dogma with not a few
+fresh articles of faith, which will then possess the same
+authority and dignity as those already universally
+received as such.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are indeed former papal decisions which, in
+becoming themselves infallible through the proclamation
+of infallibility, will in turn cover and guarantee the
+infallible character of the collective Constitutions of all
+Popes. The first of these decisions is the statement of
+Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi> in his Bull of 1520 against Luther, <q>It is clear
+as the noonday sun that the Popes, my predecessors,
+have never erred in their canons or constitutions.</q> The
+second is the declaration of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> in his Syllabus,
+<q>The Popes have never exceeded the limits of their
+power.</q> This assertion too will become an infallible
+dogma, and history must succumb and adapt itself to
+the dogma. Let us however specify some of the new
+articles of faith thus declared to be infallible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1. According to the teaching of the Church, the
+validity of the sacraments, and especially of ordination,
+depends on the use of the right form and matter. The
+whole Church for a thousand years regarded the imposition
+of the Bishop's hands as the divinely ordained
+matter of priestly ordination. But Eugenius <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>, in his
+<pb n='635'/><anchor id='Pg635'/>
+dogmatic decree, decided that the delivery of the
+Eucharistic vessels is the matter of the sacrament of
+Orders, and the words used in their delivery the form.<note place='foot'>See the decree of Eugenius in Porter's <hi rend='italic'>Systema Decretorum</hi>, p. 535, and
+in Raynaldus.</note>
+If the doctrine of this decree, solemnly issued by the
+Pope <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign> and in the name of the Council of
+Florence&mdash;which however was no longer in existence&mdash;was
+to be accepted as true and infallible, it would
+follow that the Western Church for a thousand years,
+and the Greek Church up to this day, had no validly
+ordained priests. Nay more, there would at this
+moment be no validly ordained priest or Bishop in the
+Church at all, for there would be no succession.
+And Eugenius gave an equally false definition of the
+form of the sacraments of Penance and Confirmation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+2. According to the teaching of Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>, in the
+decretal <hi rend='italic'>Novit</hi>, and other Popes after him, the Pope is
+able and is bound, whenever he believes a question of
+sin to be involved, to interfere, first with admonition
+and then with punishments. He can on this ground
+reverse any judicial sentence, bring any cause before
+his own tribunal, summon any sovereign before him,
+simply to answer for a grave sin or what he considers
+<pb n='636'/><anchor id='Pg636'/>
+such, annul his ordinances, and eventually excommunicate
+and depose him.<note place='foot'><q>Ad officium nostrum spectat de <emph>quocumque</emph> mortali peccato corripere
+quemlibet Christianum; et, si correptionem contempserit, per districtionem
+ecclesiasticam coercere.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>Decretal. Novit</hi>, c. 13, De Judic. [Cf.
+<hi rend='italic'>Janus</hi>, p. 158.]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+3. God has given to the Pope supreme jurisdiction
+over all kings and princes, not only of Christendom
+but of the whole earth. The Pope has plenary jurisdiction
+over the nations and kingdoms, he judges all
+and can be judged by none in the world, according to
+Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> in the Bull <hi rend='italic'>Cum ex Apostolatus Officio</hi>, and
+Sixtus <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> in the Bull <hi rend='italic'>Inscrutabilis</hi>. It is also a doctrine
+of faith, to be received on pain of eternal damnation,
+that the whole world is subject to the Pope even in
+temporal and political matters, according to the Bull of
+Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi>. Boniface adds that the
+Pope holds all rights <q>in scrinio pectoris sui.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+4. According to papal teaching, it is the will of God
+that the Popes should rule and <q>govern,</q> not only the
+Church, but all secular matters and literally the whole
+world. Thus Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> says; <q>Dominus Petro non
+solum universam Ecclesiam sed etiam sæculum reliquit
+gubernandum.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+5. According to papal teaching, as proclaimed by
+<pb n='637'/><anchor id='Pg637'/>
+Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi> at the Roman Council of 1080, the Popes
+with the Fathers assembled in Council under their
+presidency are not only able, by virtue of their power
+of binding and loosing, to take away and bestow
+empires, kingdoms and princedoms, but can take any
+man's property from him or adjudge it to any one.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Concil.</hi> ed. Labbé, x. 384.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+6. According to papal teaching the Pope alone can
+remit all sins of all men. Thus Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> says in
+his letter to the Patriarch of Constantinople.<note place='foot'>Innoc. <hi rend='italic'>Epist.</hi> ii. 209, p. 473, ed. Paris.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+7. According to papal teaching the Pope is ruler by
+divine right of Germany and Italy during the vacancy
+of the Imperial throne, because he has received from
+God both powers, the spiritual and the temporal, in
+their fulness (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>jura terreni simul et cœlestis imperii</foreign>). So
+John <hi rend='smallcaps'>xxii.</hi> has declared in his Bull of 1317.<note place='foot'>Raynald. <hi rend='italic'>Annal.</hi> xv. 156.</note> On
+account of this doctrine millions of German and
+Italian Christians, from 1318 to 1348, were placed
+under ban and interdict and deprived of the sacraments
+by the Popes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+8. The Pope by divine right can give whole nations
+into slavery on account of some measure of their sovereign.
+Thus Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> and Julius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi> dealt with the
+<pb n='638'/><anchor id='Pg638'/>
+Venetians on account of territorial quarrels, Gregory
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>xi.</hi> with the Florentines,<note place='foot'>Raynald. <hi rend='italic'>Annal.</hi> an. 1376, 1.</note> and Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> with the English
+on account of Henry <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>'s revolting from him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+9. The Pope can also give full authority to make
+slaves of a foreign nation merely because they are not
+Catholics. Thus Nicolas <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> in 1454 authorized King
+Alfonso of Portugal to appropriate the property of all
+Mahometans and heathens of Western Africa, and to
+reduce them to perpetual slavery.<note place='foot'>See Bull <hi rend='italic'>Romanus Pontifex</hi> confirmed by Callixtus <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> in 1456 and
+Sixtus <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> in 1481.&mdash;Morelli, <hi rend='italic'>Fasti Novi Orbis</hi>, p. 58.</note> Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi> in
+1493 gave similar rights to the Kings of Spain over all
+inhabitants of America, when bestowing on them that
+quarter of the world with all its peoples.<note place='foot'>See Bull <hi rend='italic'>Inter Cæteræ</hi> in Raynald. <hi rend='italic'>Annal.</hi></note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+10. According to papal teaching it is just and in consonance
+with the Gospel to rob innocent populations,
+cities, regions, or countries <foreign rend='italic'>en masse</foreign>, with the sole exception
+of the infants and the dying, of divine service
+and sacraments, by an interdict, merely because the
+Sovereign or Government of the country has violated
+a papal command or some right of the Church. Innocent
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>, Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>, Martin <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>, Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, John <hi rend='smallcaps'>xxiv.</hi>,
+Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi>, and others have done so.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='639'/><anchor id='Pg639'/>
+
+<p>
+11. The Popes as God's vicars on earth can make a
+present of whole countries inhabited by non-Christian
+peoples, and hand over all rights of sovereignty and
+property in them to any Christian prince they please.
+Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> did this in his Bull addressed to Ferdinand
+the Catholic and Isabella, as he declares, <q>auctoritate
+omnipotentis Dei nobis in B. Petro concessâ ac
+Vicariatûs Jesu Christi, quâ fungimur in terris.</q><note place='foot'>Raynald. <hi rend='italic'>Annal.</hi> an. 1493, 19.</note>
+Historically it may be said with perfect truth, that the
+peoples of the southern and middle regions of America
+have been made the victims of the theory of papal infallibility.
+The Spanish Church and nation, as well as
+the sovereigns, have willingly received and maintained
+this doctrine, because their claim both to Navarre and
+America rested solely upon it, primarily on the Bulls of
+Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi> and Julius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi> With the Gallican doctrine
+both claims would fall through. Alexander had
+empowered the Spaniards to make the Indians slaves.
+All Spanish theologians appeal with Las Casas to <q>el
+divino poder del Papa,</q> as he calls it, as the basis of
+the Spanish dominion in America, and no one dared
+to call in question the divine right of the infallible
+vicar of God, by virtue whereof he had given over
+<pb n='640'/><anchor id='Pg640'/>
+millions of Indians to slavery, and thereby to extermination;
+within eighty years whole countries were
+depopulated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+12. It is just and consonant with the Gospel to burn
+to death as heretics those who appeal from the sentence
+of the Pope to a General Council. So Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi> declares
+in his Bull of 1517, <hi rend='italic'>Pastor Æternus</hi> (issued in the fifth
+Lateran Synod).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+13. Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi> declared in another Bull, <hi rend='italic'>Supernæ Dispositionis</hi>,
+also published in the Lateran Synod, that all
+clerics are wholly exempt by divine right from all civil
+jurisdiction, and therefore not bound in conscience by
+the civil law.<note place='foot'>Harduin. <hi rend='italic'>Concil</hi> ix. 1756.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+14. According to the teaching of the Church, every
+Christian is bound before God to do penance for his
+sins by ascetic exercises of abstinence, self-denial and
+almsgiving. On Church principles no one can dispense
+from this obligation, because it rests on divine ordinance.
+But the Popes teach that it may be relaxed or
+superseded by means of plenary or particular indulgences
+granted by themselves. They teach that to take part
+in a war against enemies of the Holy See and in the
+extermination of heretics is an effectual means for
+<pb n='641'/><anchor id='Pg641'/>
+gaining pardon of sins, and a complete substitute for
+all works of penance. Thus did Paschal <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi> instruct
+Count Robert of Flanders in 1102, that for him and his
+warriors the surest means of obtaining forgiveness of
+sins and heaven was to make war upon the clergy of
+Liége and all adherents of the German Emperor, Henry
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi><note place='foot'>Baron. <hi rend='italic'>Annal. Eccl.</hi> an. 1102, sect. 18.</note> Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> charged King Philip Augustus of
+France with the conquest of England, after he had
+deposed King John, as a means for obtaining remission
+of sin.<note place='foot'>Rog. Wendover, <hi rend='italic'>Hist.</hi> iii. 251.</note> Martin <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> again impelled the French in 1283 to
+make war on the Aragonese by the promise of plenary
+remission of their sins.<note place='foot'>Raynald. <hi rend='italic'>Annal.</hi> an. 1283-4.</note> And whenever there was a
+war to be undertaken in the territorial interests of the
+Holy See, or for the extermination of heretics, the Popes
+urged men to take part in it as the surest and most
+effectual means for cleansing them from all their sins
+and attaining eternal happiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+15. The Inquisition, both Spanish and Italian, is so
+pure a product of papal teaching on faith and morals,
+that there never was an Inquisitor who did not exercise
+his office by virtue of Papal authority and in the Pope's
+name, or whose power the Pope could not at any moment
+<pb n='642'/><anchor id='Pg642'/>
+he chose have wholly or partially withdrawn. All
+essential laws and regulations of the Inquisition&mdash;the
+accused being deprived of any advocate to defend him,
+the admission of infamous and perjured witnesses, the
+frequent application of the torture, the obliging the
+civil magistrates to carry out capital sentences of the
+Inquisitors, the prohibition to spare the life of any
+lapsed heretic even on his conversion&mdash;all this emanates
+from the direct and personal legislation of the Popes,
+and has always been confirmed by their successors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+16. Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>, Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>, and Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> teach
+that it is in accordance with the principles of morality
+and the Gospel to condemn a heretic seized by the
+Inquisition, who has recanted, to lifelong imprisonment.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Litera Apost. Summorum Pontif. pro offic. S. Inquis.</hi>, Venet. 1607,
+p. 3.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+17. Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> teaches that it is lawful for the
+Pope to have the goods of those condemned for heresy
+sold by his inquisitors, and to take the proceeds for
+himself.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Ib.</hi> p. 39.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+18. Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>, Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>, and Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>
+teach that it is just and consonant with the Gospel to
+deprive the sons and daughters of heretics, though
+<pb n='643'/><anchor id='Pg643'/>
+themselves Catholics, of their hereditary property.
+But if the sons themselves accuse their parents and
+get them burnt, then their inherited property, according
+to papal doctrine, is exempt from confiscation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+19. According to papal teaching torture is an institution
+thoroughly in harmony with morality and the
+spirit of the Gospel, and should be employed particularly
+against those accused of heresy. Thus Innocent
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Iv.</hi> and many later Popes have directed, and Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>
+ordered the rack to be very extensively used.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+20. It is especially just and Christian, according to
+the teaching and regulation of Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> in 1569, to torture
+persons who have confessed or been convicted of
+heresy, in order to make them give up their accomplices.<note place='foot'>Del Bene, <hi rend='italic'>Decreta et Constitt. Pontif.</hi> in his <hi rend='italic'>De Offic. Inquis.</hi> ii. 647.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+21. This same canonized Pope has ordered in a Bull
+that even the sons of a man who has once offended an
+inquisitor should be punished with infamy and confiscation
+of their goods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+22. There is a whole string of papal decrees declaring
+it a duty of conscience for every Christian to denounce
+even his nearest relations to the Inquisition, and give
+them up to prison, torture and death, if he perceives
+<pb n='644'/><anchor id='Pg644'/>
+any trace of heretical opinions or of anything forbidden
+by the Church in them.<note place='foot'>[That this is no mere abstract theory, even in quite recent days, may
+be seen from Blanco White's account of his mother's agony of mind when
+she began to suspect his opinions and feared it might become her duty to
+denounce him to the Inquisition.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+23. The same Popes have declared it to be just and
+evangelical, and have ordered, that a relapsed heretic,
+even if he recants, should be put to death.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Decr.</hi> v. 7, 9, and Lucius <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> and Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> in Lib. vi. 5. 2. 4.</note> They have
+further declared it to be moral and Christian-like that
+in trials for heresy witnesses should be admitted to
+accuse or give evidence against the accused, whose
+testimony would not be admitted in any other court
+on account of their former crimes or their infamy.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Ib.</hi> 5, 2, 5.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+24. According to papal teaching it is just and Christian
+forcibly to deprive heretics of their children, in order
+to bring them up Catholics. Thus Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>xii.</hi>, by a
+sentence of the Holy Office at Rome, pronounced null
+and void the edict of Duke Victor Amadeus of Savoy
+in 1694 ordering their children, who had been forcibly
+taken from them, to be restored to the unfortunate and
+cruelly persecuted Waldenses under his government.<note place='foot'>Carsetti, <hi rend='italic'>Storia del Regno di Vittorio Amadeo di Savoia</hi>, Torino,
+1856, p. 178. The Pope said it was <q>cosa da non potersi dir senza
+lagrime.</q></note>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='645'/><anchor id='Pg645'/>
+
+<p>
+25. The Popes teach that a sentence once pronounced
+for heresy can never be mitigated, nor pardon ever
+granted to any one sentenced to death or perpetual
+imprisonment for heresy. Thus Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> rules in
+his Bull <hi rend='italic'>Ad Exstirpanda</hi>.<note place='foot'>Guerra, <hi rend='italic'>Pontif. Constit.</hi> i. 177.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+26. Up to 1555 it was the teaching of the Popes that
+only those should be burnt who persisted obstinately in
+maintaining a doctrine condemned by the Church, and
+those who had relapsed after recanting into the same
+or some other heresy. But in that year Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi>
+established the new principle that certain doctrines,
+if only just put forward and at once retracted, should
+be punished with death. Thus whoever rejected any
+ecclesiastical definition on the Trinity, or denied the
+perpetual virginity of Mary and maintained that the
+scriptural language about <q>brothers of Jesus</q> was to
+be taken literally of children of Mary, was to be
+classed with the <q>relapsed</q> and to be executed, even
+though he recanted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+27. Up to 1751, theologians, especially Italians, who
+defended trials for witchcraft and the reality of an
+express compact with Satan, together with the various
+preternatural crimes wrought thereby and the carnal
+<pb n='646'/><anchor id='Pg646'/>
+intercourse of men and demons (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>incubi et succubi</foreign>),
+used to appeal to the infallible authority of the Popes,
+the Bulls of Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>, Sixtus <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>xv.</hi> and
+several more besides, in which these things are affirmed
+and assumed and the due penalties prescribed for them.<note place='foot'>See, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, Tartarotti, <hi rend='italic'>Apologia del Congresso</hi>, etc., p. 176.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+28. If an oath that has been taken is prejudicial to
+the interests of the Church (<hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, in money matters), it
+must be broken. So teaches Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi><note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Decr.</hi> ii. 24, 27.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+29. The Popes can dispense at their pleasure oaths
+of allegiance taken by a people to their King, as
+Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi>, Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>, Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi>, and many
+others have done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+30. They can also absolve a sovereign from the
+treaties he has sworn to observe or from his oath to the
+Constitution of his country, or give full power to his
+confessor to absolve him from any oath he finds it inconvenient
+to keep. Such a plenary power Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi>
+gave to King John of France and his successors.<note place='foot'>D'Achery, <hi rend='italic'>Spicileg.</hi> iii. 714. [<q>Vobis et successoribus vestris Regibus
+et Reginis Franciæ in perpetuum indulgemus, ut confessor religiosus vel
+sæcularis quem vestrûm vel eorum quilibet duxerit eligendnm, vota per vos
+forsitan jam emissa, <emph>ac per vos et successores vestros in posterum emittenda</emph>
+... necnon juramenta per vos præstita, <emph>et per vos et eos præstanda in
+posterum</emph>, quæ vos et illi <emph>servare commode non possitis</emph>, vobis et eis commutare
+valeat in alia opera pietatis.</q> Two cases are reserved, viz., vows
+of chastity and <emph>vows taken to the Pope</emph>.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> Thus
+<pb n='647'/><anchor id='Pg647'/>
+Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi> absolved the Emperor Charles <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> from his
+oath restricting his absolutism over popular rights in
+Belgium, and again from his oath not to banish the
+Moriscos from their home. And Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>iv.</hi> announced
+to the Emperors Charles and Ferdinand that he dispensed
+their oath to observe the Augsburg religious
+peace.<note place='foot'>Bzov. <hi rend='italic'>Annal. Eccl.</hi> an. 1555, p. 306, ed. Colon.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+31. In 1648 a prospect of toleration was held out to
+the sorely oppressed Catholics of England and Ireland,
+if they would sign a renunciation of the following
+principles, (α) The Pope can dispense any one from
+obedience to the existing Government; (β) The Pope
+can absolve from an oath taken to a heretic; (γ) Those
+who have been condemned as heretics by the Pope
+may at his command, or with his dispensation, be put
+to death or otherwise injured. This renunciation
+was signed by fifty-nine English noblemen and several
+ecclesiastics, but Pope Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi> declared that all
+who had signed it had incurred the penalties denounced
+against those who deny papal authority, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, excommunication,
+etc. And so the penal laws against Catholics
+remained in force for another century. Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> had
+previously condemned the oath of allegiance prescribed
+<pb n='648'/><anchor id='Pg648'/>
+by James <hi rend='smallcaps'>i.</hi> for the English Catholics, and the execution
+of a considerable number of them was the
+result.<note place='foot'>Dodd, <hi rend='italic'>Church History of England</hi>, iii. 288; <hi rend='italic'>Tractat. Dogmat. et Scholast.
+de Ecclesiâ</hi>, Romæ, 1782, ii. 245.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+32. The Popes teach that they can absolve men from
+any vow made to God or empower others to do so, and
+can even give them powers prospectively for dispensing
+vows to be made hereafter. And thus they have
+empowered royal confessors to absolve kings from any
+future vow they may find reason to repent of.<note place='foot'>D'Acheray, <hi rend='italic'>Spicileg.</hi> iii. 721.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+33. The Popes have declared, by granting indulgences,
+that their jurisdiction extends over Purgatory also, and
+that it depends on them to deliver the dead who are
+there and transfer them into heaven. Thus Julius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ii.</hi>
+bestowed on the Order of Knights of St. George, restored
+by the Emperor Maximilian, the privilege that,
+on assuming the habit of the Order, the Knights <q>confessi
+et contriti, a pœnâ et a culpâ et a carcere Purgatorii
+et pœnis ejusdem mox et penitus absoluti et quittandi
+esse debeant, planè et liberè Paradisum et regnum intraturi.</q><note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Acta Sanct. Bolland.</hi> Ap. 23, p. 157.</note>
+Then or shortly before (1500) the doctrine
+was first propounded in Rome, that the Popes could
+<pb n='649'/><anchor id='Pg649'/>
+attach to certain altars by special privileges the power
+of delivering one or more souls from Purgatory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+34. The Pope can dissolve a marriage by placing one
+of the parties under the greater excommunication, and
+thus declaring him a heathen and infidel. Urban <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>
+did this in 1363, when he excommunicated Bernabó
+Visconti, Duke of Milan, depriving him and all his children
+of all their rights and property and absolving his
+subjects from their allegiance to him, and at the same
+time pronouncing his wife free to marry again: <q>Uxorem
+ejus uti Christianam a vinculo matrimonii cum hæretico
+et infideli liberavit.</q><note place='foot'>Spondani, <hi rend='italic'>Annal. Eccl. Contin.</hi> ii. 595.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+35. Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> had paved the way for this by
+establishing the doctrine that the bond between a Bishop
+and his diocese is stronger than the marriage bond
+between man and wife, and therefore as indissoluble by
+man as the latter, and that God alone could dissolve it,
+and the Pope as God's vicegerent.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Decr. de Transl.</hi> c. ii. 3, 4. [Cf. <hi rend='italic'>Janus</hi>, pp. 55, 56.]</note> It followed that
+the Pope, and he alone, could also dissolve a validly
+contracted marriage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+36. According to papal teaching it is praiseworthy
+and Christian for a man, who has promised a woman
+<pb n='650'/><anchor id='Pg650'/>
+with an oath to marry her, to deceive her by a sham
+marriage, and then break the bond and retire into a
+monastery. This recommendation (to commit an act of
+treachery at once and of sacrilege) was given by Alexander
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> in 1172, and it has been incorporated in
+the code of canon law drawn up by command of the
+Popes.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Decr.</hi> iv. 1, 16.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+37. The Popes teach that anyone attending a service
+celebrated by a married priest commits sacrilege, because
+the blessing he gives turns to a curse. So
+Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi> teaches, in direct contradiction to the
+doctrine of the ancient Church, and even to modern
+theology.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Dist.</hi> 81, c. 15.</note> The notion has long since been exploded.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Concil. Gangrens.</hi> can. 4.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+38. The Popes teach that they have the power of
+rewarding services done to themselves with a higher
+degree of eternal beatitude. Thus Nicolas <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> promised
+all who should take up arms against Amadeus of
+Savoy (the antipope Felix) and his adherents, not only
+remission of all their sins, but an increase of heavenly
+happiness, and gave his lands and property at the same
+time to the King of France.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Concil.</hi> ed. Labbé, t. xiii. pp. 1322, 3.</note>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='651'/><anchor id='Pg651'/>
+
+<p>
+39. The Popes teach that it is false and damnable to
+maintain that a Christian ought not to abstain from
+doing his duty from fear of an unjust excommunication.
+Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>xi.</hi> declares the contrary to be true in his
+Bull <hi rend='italic'>Unigenitus</hi>, prop. 91.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+40. Those who die wearing the Carmelite scapular
+have papal assurance, resting on a revelation granted to
+John <hi rend='smallcaps'>xxii.</hi>, that they will be delivered on the next
+Saturday after their death by the Virgin Mary from
+Purgatory and conveyed straight to heaven. So says
+the Bull <hi rend='italic'>Sabbathina</hi>, confirmed by Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>,
+Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>vii.</hi>, Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, Gregory <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiii.</hi>, and Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, by
+the last after long and careful examination, and with
+indulgences attached to it.<note place='foot'>See Amort, <hi rend='italic'>De Indulg.</hi> i. 146.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+41. According to papal decisions it is an excess of
+extravagance and folly, and a detestable innovation, to
+translate the Roman missal into the vernacular. It is
+to violate and trample under foot the majesty of the
+ritual composed in Latin words, to expose the dignity
+of the holy mysteries to the gaze of the rabble, to
+produce disobedience, audacity, insolence, sedition and
+many other evils. The authors of such translations are
+<pb n='652'/><anchor id='Pg652'/>
+<q>sons of perdition.</q> Alexander <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> says this <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>totidem
+verbis</foreign> in his Brief of Jan. 12, 1661.<note place='foot'>D'Argentré, <hi rend='italic'>Collectio Judiciorum</hi>, Paris, 1728, iii. 297.</note> Nevertheless the
+translated missal is in general circulation in France,
+England and Germany, and is daily used by all the
+most pious persons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+42. To receive interest on invested money is a grievous
+sin according to papal teaching, and any one who has
+done so is bound to make restitution. Papal legislation
+makes it, under the name of usury, an ecclesiastical
+offence to be judged by the spiritual tribunals. The
+principle established by the Popes was, that it is unlawful
+and sinful to ask for any compensation for the
+use of capital lent out. And under the head of usury,
+which was strictly forbidden, was included anything
+whatever received by the lender in compensation for
+his capital, every kind of interest, commercial business
+and the like. Thus Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi> pronounced it heresy
+to defend taking interest, and liable to the penalties of
+the papal law against heresy.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Clementin.</hi> i. 5, De Usuris, tit. 5.</note> His successors, Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>,
+Sixtus <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, and especially Benedict <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi>, adhered to this
+condemnation of all taking of interest. The results
+<pb n='653'/><anchor id='Pg653'/>
+were that real usury was greatly advanced thereby,
+that all sorts of evasions and illusory contracts came
+into actual use, that the wealth of whole countries was
+damaged, and commercial greatness, banished from
+Catholic countries, became the monopoly of Protestant
+countries.<note place='foot'>[On this subject, as also on persecution, the reader may profitably consult
+<hi rend='italic'>Papal Infallibility and Persecution; Papal Infallibility</hi> and <hi rend='italic'>Usury</hi>.
+By an English Catholic. Macmillan, 1870.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='654'/><anchor id='Pg654'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifty-Seventh Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 18, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The great merits of Cardoni
+are at length to receive their fitting reward. He has
+hitherto been only Archbishop of Nisibis, a city that
+has long ceased to exist; he has now become keeper
+of the archives of the Roman Church. He was the
+principal person intrusted last year with the grand
+mystery of the fabrication of the new dogma, which
+required for its success the strictest secrecy; the
+Bishops, with the exception of course of the initiated,
+were to be drawn to Rome unprepared and innocent of
+the design and then to be taken by surprise. Had the
+real object of the Council become known in the spring
+of 1869, it might easily have proved a complete failure.
+It was therefore intrusted to Cardoni's experienced
+hands, who managed matters so well in the Commission
+that the Bishops were kept in the dark, and his
+lucubrations on infallibility were first printed in April,&mdash;it
+<pb n='655'/><anchor id='Pg655'/>
+is said after being considerably altered by the
+Jesuits. The reward of Cardoni is a punishment for
+Theiner, who has to suffer for his Life of Clement <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi>
+and for communicating to some of the Bishops a paper
+on the order of business at Trent. The archives are
+now closed to him, and he has had to surrender the
+keys to Cardoni, though he nominally retains his office.
+Every German scholar knows that Theiner, after coming
+to Rome, became extremely reserved in his communications
+and very cautious in his own publications,
+always suppressing whatever might excite displeasure
+there, and throw a slur on the Roman authorities. It
+was much easier under his predecessor Marini&mdash;as
+German and French scholars, such as Pertz, Raumer
+and Cherrier, and the British Museum can testify&mdash;to
+get a sight of documents or even transcripts, of course
+for a good remuneration. Theiner, who was inaccessible
+to bribery, knew that he had an abundance of enemies
+and jealous rivals watching him, and carefully guarded
+against giving them any handle against him. But the
+original sin of his German origin clung to him; he was
+not a Reisach and could not Italianize himself. There
+is great joy in the Gesù, the German College, and the
+offices of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>!
+</p>
+
+<pb n='656'/><anchor id='Pg656'/>
+
+<p>
+Theiner's great offence is his letting certain Bishops,
+viz., Hefele and Strossmayer, see the account of the
+order of business at the Council of Trent, showing the
+striking difference between that and the present regulations
+and the greater freedom of the Tridentine
+synod. But Hefele had seen the Tridentine Acts in
+the spring of 1869, and knew about it without Theiner's
+help.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile there is no abatement of the bitter exasperation
+in the highest circles. The three chief organs
+of the Court&mdash;the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, the <hi rend='italic'>Unità</hi> and the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>&mdash;have
+evidently received orders to vie with each other
+in their descriptions of the <q>Liberal Catholics</q> as the
+most abandoned and dangerous of men. For the
+moment nobody is more abominated than a Catholic
+who is opposed to infallibility and unwilling to see the
+teaching of the Church brought into contradiction with
+the laws of his country, which is what they mean by a
+Liberal Catholic; such persons are worse than Freemasons.
+The <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi> says they are more dangerous to
+<q>the cause of God</q> than atheists, and have already
+proved so. We know how his confessors, La Chaise
+and Le Tellier, explained to Louis <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi> that a Jansenist
+is worse and more dangerous than an atheist.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='657'/><anchor id='Pg657'/>
+
+<p>
+In convents and girls' schools the new article of
+faith is already strong enough to work miracles. The
+<hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi> relates <q>a miraculous cure wrought through an
+act of faith in the infallibility of the Vicar of Christ,</q>
+at Vienna on May 24. But that is little in comparison
+with the greater and more difficult miracles which
+the dogma will have to accomplish. If the English
+proverb is true, there is nothing more stubborn than
+facts; to remove them from history or change their
+nature will be harder than to move mountains. Here
+in Rome we are daily assured that the dogma has conquered
+history, but these anticipated conquests will
+have to be fought out, at least everywhere north of the
+Alps, and cannot be won without great miracles. But
+the Jesuits have never of course been without their
+thaumaturgists, and they have been able to accomplish
+the impossible even in the historical domain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Pope seems peculiarly annoyed at some of the
+English Bishops opposing infallibility, probably because
+Manning had told him that the English above all
+others reverenced him as the organ of the Holy Ghost.
+He lately broke out into most bitter reproaches against
+Bishop Clifford of Clifton, before an assemblage of
+Frenchmen, most of whom did not even know him by
+<pb n='658'/><anchor id='Pg658'/>
+name, and accused him of low ambition, saying that he
+knew <q>ex certâ scientiâ</q> the only reason why Clifford
+would not believe in his infallibility was because he
+had not made him Archbishop of Westminster. Yet
+there is perhaps no member of the Council whom every
+one credits with so entire an absence of any ambitious
+thought. The spectacle of such conduct on the part of
+the man, who for twenty-four years has held the highest
+earthly dignity, produces a painful feeling in some,
+and contempt in others.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is indeed disgusting to see the Court party compelling
+men, most of them aged, to remain here to the
+great injury of their health at a season when all who
+are able to do so leave Rome, although many of them are
+accustomed to a different climate and feel sick and exhausted.
+They are treated like prisoners, and not even
+allowed a holiday without special leave. No such egotistic
+and unscrupulous absolutism, as what now prevails
+here, has been seen in the Christian world since the days
+of the first Napoleon. If there were any persons here
+besides courtiers who could advise the Pope, as friends,
+they would have to tell him that his credit before the
+world demanded that an end should be put to this state
+of torture, and the Bishops be allowed to depart, many
+<pb n='659'/><anchor id='Pg659'/>
+of whom are already dead. But, as was observed before,
+even Antonelli does not conceal his impotence as regards
+the Council, and as to others, it may suffice to
+acquaint Transalpine readers with one detail of Roman
+Court etiquette. If the Pope sneezes, the attendant
+prelate must immediately fall on his knees, and cry
+<q>Evviva!</q> in that position. Every man is at last what
+his <foreign rend='italic'>entourage</foreign> has made him, and Pius has for twenty-four
+years had every one kneeling before him, and has
+been daily overwhelmed with adorations and acts of
+homage, the effect of which may be read in Suetonius'
+biographies of the Emperors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The affair of the Prince Bishop of Breslau, who was
+not allowed to leave Rome, has been arranged, by
+Cardinal Antonelli ordering an apology to be made.
+The regulations about refusing visas were only meant
+for the Orientals, who are certainly detained in Rome
+against their will, but in extending the same treatment
+to German prelates the police had exceeded their
+instructions and must be severely punished. Förster
+answered that he did not wish this, and that Cardinal
+de Angelis in his note had fully approved their conduct.
+Meanwhile the same thing has been repeated: the visa
+was refused to the suffragan Bishop of Erlau in Hungary,
+<pb n='660'/><anchor id='Pg660'/>
+who wanted to go to Naples, because he had received
+no permission from the Secretary, Bishop Fessler.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Franciscan, Hötzl, has made an explanation
+satisfactory to the authorities, and is now again received
+into favour, but he is to stay here for the festival
+of June 29, on which day, as Pius was at least convinced
+a week ago, the proclamation of the new dogma
+with all imaginable pomp will take place. We live in
+very humane times, and so the good Father from
+Munich has suffered no worse martyrdom than the
+heat. He has been instructed, the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>genius loci</foreign> has done
+its work, his Spanish General has simply reminded
+him of certain rules of the Order&mdash;and so his conversion
+has been very quickly, easily and happily accomplished.
+He was not even threatened, I believe, with
+the Inquisition, and even there he would not have
+fared as ill as Galileo in 1633.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You must allow me, before relating the events of the
+last few days in the Council Hall, to recur to the
+occurrences of June 3, which I am now better acquainted
+with, and which have proved to be sufficiently important
+and eventful to deserve more detailed mention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the motion of Cardinal Bonnechose, who belongs
+to the middle party, Cardinal de Angelis had asked the
+<pb n='661'/><anchor id='Pg661'/>
+Pope, directly after the session of June 2, whether he
+would not permit the prorogation of the Council, in
+view of the intolerable heat and the too long absence
+already of so many Bishops from their dioceses. The
+reply was a decided negative; there should be no
+adjournment till the infallibilist <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> was disposed
+of. That was a hint to the majority, which they used
+next day, as the wish to cut short the debates had been
+loudly expressed for some days previously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the same day the Bishop of Pittsburg in North
+America spoke against infallibility and defended the
+Catholics of his country, who had hitherto known
+nothing of this doctrine, but were yet genuine Catholics
+in life and practice and not in name only, like the
+Italians. Capalti immediately attacked him and imposed
+silence. Bishop Dinkel of Augsburg followed.
+Senestrey, Bishop of Ratisbon, in the previous sitting
+had assured the prelates, who listened eagerly, that all
+Germany, so far as it was Catholic, thought as he did,
+and that every one was deeply penetrated with reverence
+for the infallible Pope, while it was a mere invention
+of certain evil-minded persons that there were those
+in Germany who doubted this divine prerogative of
+the Vicar of God. The astonishment was great; they
+<pb n='662'/><anchor id='Pg662'/>
+had heard so often that the aversion to the new dogma
+was most deeply rooted and most widely spread in
+Germany. Dinkel pointedly contradicted his colleague,
+and warned them against being misled by such tricks.
+He won great commendation, and his Biblical comments
+were also found to be well grounded and to the
+purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bishop Maret of Sura next ascended the tribune. He
+like others has made advances since being in the
+Roman school. If he had to write his work on the
+Pope and Council now, he would take a far more
+decided and bolder line. It was not without reason
+that he pointedly distinguished the two things, papal
+infallibility based and dependent on episcopal consent,
+and the personal infallibility of the Pope deciding
+alone, as the real subject of the controversy; for during
+the last few days there have been Bishops who excused
+their adhesion to the majority on the pretext that they
+only found the former kind of infallibility in the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>. Maret then showed in what a labyrinth the
+majority was on the point of involving the Council.
+Either the Council was to give the Pope an infallibility
+he did not yet possess, in which case the donor was
+higher than the receiver by divine and therefore inalienable
+<pb n='663'/><anchor id='Pg663'/>
+rights; or the Pope was to give himself an
+infallibility he had not hitherto possessed, in which
+case he could change the divine constitution of the
+Church by his own plenary power; and if so why
+summon a Council and ask its vote? There Bilio
+angrily interrupted him, exclaiming to one of the most
+learned and respected men of the French clergy, the
+president of the Paris Theological Faculty, <q>Tu non
+nôsti prima rudimenta fidei.</q> And then he gave the
+explanation I mentioned before, that it did not belong
+to the Council to bear witness, to judge and to decide,
+but only to acknowledge the truth and give its vote,
+and then to leave the Pope to define what he chose
+by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost. There could be
+no talk here of majority or minority, but only of the
+Council. The majority applauded. Maret remained
+quiet, and asked without changing countenance, after
+this effusion of Bilio's was at an end, <q>Licitumne est
+ac liberum continuare sermonem.</q> Then all was
+silence, and he was able to finish his speech without
+further interruption.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hereupon followed the violent closing of the discussion
+by a decree of the majority. The euphemistic language
+in which the <hi rend='italic'>Giornale di Roma</hi> announced it next
+<pb n='664'/><anchor id='Pg664'/>
+day was remarkable:&mdash;<q>Fù <emph>terminata</emph> la discussione
+generale intorno alla materia di fede, che cominciata
+con la Congregazione del 14 Maggio, era stata proseguita
+per tutte le adunanze tenute nel suddetto spazio
+di tempo, nelle quali ebbero parlato in proposito 65
+padri,</q> etc.&mdash;such an obituary announcement as those
+which used to be put into the Russian newspapers on
+the death of a Czar, and which led Talleyrand to say,
+<q>Il serait enfin temps que les Empereurs de Russie
+changeassent de maladie.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the international meeting at Cardinal Rauscher's
+on the 4th, when about 100 Bishops were present, some
+of the bolder and more vigorous of them thought they
+ought to show by observing complete silence that there
+was no freedom at the Council. This view, as was
+said before, did not prevail; and the alternative of a
+protest was again adopted. On June 6, when the
+special debate began, Bishop Verot of Savannah in
+Georgia was the speaker who incurred the peculiar
+displeasure of the Court party, and was maltreated by
+Bilio. He objected to the words of the preamble
+<q>juxta communem et universalem doctrinam,</q> as not
+being true, because the doctrine referred to was not universal
+or everywhere received, but was only the doctrine
+<pb n='665'/><anchor id='Pg665'/>
+of the so-called ultramontane school. At this murmurs
+arose, and Verot remarked that a previous speaker&mdash;Valerga&mdash;had
+been quietly listened to while he talked
+for an hour and a half about the Gallican school, and
+compared them with the Monothelite heretics; it was
+only fair therefore to let him call the other school by
+its name. Hereupon Bilio, who has assumed the rôle
+of <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex officio</foreign> blusterer and terrorist, interposed in his
+manner of a brawling monk, saying this topic had
+nothing to do with the preamble, and could be
+introduced afterwards in the discussion on the four
+chapters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bishop Pie of Poitiers had proposed to his colleagues
+on the Commission <hi rend='italic'>de Fide</hi> to put the article on infallibility,
+which was too crudely worded, into a shape
+which all could accept, to which Manning and Dechamps
+replied that it could not be improved upon, and
+they would allow not the slightest change. And as
+they had a majority in the Commission, Pie's wish was
+strangled before its birth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is no want of restless activity and agitation in
+favour of infallibility. The processions to obtain the
+gift of infallibility from the Holy Virgin and the
+numerous Saints, whose bones and relics fill the Roman
+<pb n='666'/><anchor id='Pg666'/>
+Churches, march with sonorous devotion through the
+streets; the lazy and lukewarm are urged not to remain
+idle at so important a time, and there is no lack
+of intimations of the real profits which the dogma
+must yield to the city. The Bishops of the minority
+must have had marble hearts if they had continued
+proof against so many fervent prayers for their conversion,
+and wished still to defend their Gallican citadel
+in spite of the general assault upon it. The Roman
+parish priests have already presented an address in
+favour of the dogma, but not&mdash;as I hear&mdash;till after the
+opposition among them had been put down by the
+highest authority. And now an urgent admonition has
+been addressed to the University Professors either to
+signify their desire for the definition or resign their
+offices. All who receive salaries here have long been
+accustomed to the soft pressure put upon them from
+above, and are hastening, with a correct appreciation
+of the importance of the wish of the authorities, to
+follow lead. In the last few days we have had an
+address from 40 Chamberlains of the Fathers of the
+Council who <q>prostrate at the Pope's most sacred feet
+earnestly desire to have the opportunity of sharing the
+wholesome fruits (<foreign lang='it' rend='italic'>saluberrimi frutti</foreign>) of infallibility and
+<pb n='667'/><anchor id='Pg667'/>
+the exultation felt by all true believers at the decree.</q>
+The text of the address is given in the <hi rend='italic'>Unita Cattolica</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the chief Pontiff himself speaks in
+most emphatic terms. The <foreign rend='italic'>Tedeschi</foreign>, notwithstanding
+Senestrey's assurances, are in bad odour here. A letter
+of the Papal Secretary in the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi> of June 2
+describes the Opposition Bishops as <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>amateurs de nouveautés
+dangereuses</foreign>, and I understand that in a letter to
+Chigi, the nuncio at Paris, the Pope speaks of his infallibility
+as <q>that pious doctrine, which for so many centuries
+nobody questioned.</q> This expression is peculiarly
+suggestive. That the Pope uses it in good faith is certain,
+and that he has not gained his conviction by any
+study of his own is equally certain. He has been
+deluded by this monstrous lie, which no single even
+half-educated infallibilist will make himself responsible
+for, and thus has been driven into his perilous course.
+No one, who has but glanced at the official Roman
+historians, such as Baronius or Orsi or Saccarelli, can
+possibly maintain seriously that there has been no
+doubt for centuries about papal infallibility. This saying
+lifts the veil and affords us a glance into the workshop,
+where the Pandora's basket was fabricated which has
+now been opened before our eyes. Future theologians
+<pb n='668'/><anchor id='Pg668'/>
+will know how to appreciate that weighty saying,
+<q>no one for many centuries,</q> and I for my part would
+say, like Gratiano to Shylock, <q>I thank thee for teaching
+me that word.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Schwarzenberg, who spoke on the 7th
+against the second chapter, was not, I think, interrupted,
+as was however the Bishop of Biella, Losanna, on the
+pretext that he did not keep to the subject. The old
+man is a doubly unpleasant phenomenon to the Court
+party, both from his boldness and clearness of view,
+and as being a living proof that even an Italian may be
+a decided opponent of infallibilism. At the international
+meeting at Cardinal Rauscher's on the 8th it was
+determined that the third chapter was to be especially
+attacked in the speeches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This third chapter deals with matters of very pregnant
+import. It binds the Bishops to the acknowledgment
+that all men are immediately and directly under the
+Pope, which means that the so-called papal system is
+to be made exclusively dominant in the Church, in
+place of the old episcopal system, or in other words is to
+displace the latter, as it existed in the ancient Church,
+altogether. Bishops remain only as Papal Commissaries,
+possessed of so much power as the Pope finds good to
+<pb n='669'/><anchor id='Pg669'/>
+leave them, and exercising such authority only as he
+does not directly exercise himself; there is no longer
+any episcopate, and thus one grade of the hierarchy is
+abolished. The persons bearing the name of Bishops
+are wholly different from the old and real Bishops;
+they have nothing more to do with the higher teaching
+office (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>magisterium</foreign>), and have no authority or sphere of
+their own, but only delegated functions and powers,
+which the Pope or any one appointed by him can
+encroach upon at pleasure. Even this is not enough
+for Archbishop Dechamps of Mechlin, who has now
+proposed four canons anathematizing all defenders of
+the episcopal system; this has roused the suspicions
+even of several Bishops of the majority. These four
+canons are so significant an illustration of the aims of
+the party that they deserve to be put on record here:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(1.) <q rend='pre'>Si quis dixerit Romanum Pontificem habere quidem
+in Ecclesia primatum jurisdictionis, non vero etiam
+supremam potestatem docendi, regendi et gubernandi
+Ecclesiam, perinde ac si primatus jurisdictionis ab illâ
+supremâ, potestate distingui posset&mdash;anathema sit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(2.) <q rend='pre'>Si quis dixerit talem potestatem Romani Pontificis
+non esse plenam, sed divisam inter S. Pontificem
+et episcopos, quasi episcopi a Spiritu S. positi ad
+<pb n='670'/><anchor id='Pg670'/>
+Ecclesiam Dei docendam et regendam sub unico summo
+pastore etiam divinitus vocati fuerint, ut in supremâ
+potestate totius Ecclesiæ capitis participent&mdash;anathema
+sit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(3.) <q rend='pre'>Si quis dixerit supremam in Ecclesia potestatem
+non residere in universæ Ecclesiæ capite, sed in episcoporum
+pluralitate&mdash;anathema sit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(4.) <q>Si quis dixerit Romano Pontifici datam quidem
+esse plenam potestatem regendi et gubernandi, non
+autem etiam plenam potestatem docendi universalem
+Ecclesiam, fideles et pastores&mdash;anathema sit.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='671'/><anchor id='Pg671'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifty-Eighth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 21, 1870.</hi>&mdash;What I have to communicate
+in this letter is so important, that I find it desirable
+to take it out of the historical order of events and let it
+precede the detailed account of what occurred between
+June 8 and 17.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A circumstance occurred on Saturday, which has
+kept all who are interested about the Council in breathless
+suspense ever since. Nothing in fact could be
+more unexpected than that, at the moment when the
+Opposition, though still maintaining the contest from a
+sense of conscientious duty, almost despairs of success,
+a fresh ally should join its ranks in the person of a
+Roman Cardinal, whose accession is the more valuable
+because he does not only speak in his own name,
+but has concerted his speech with the fifteen Bishops
+of his Order. In fact I hear his speech spoken of
+in many quarters as the most important and unexpected
+<pb n='672'/><anchor id='Pg672'/>
+event in the Council. It must not of course be
+supposed that Guidi's spirited speech represents adequately
+the tendencies of the Opposition, but still it
+must be affirmed that it involves a complete, and as
+we believe irreconcilable, breach with the majority. In
+order to enable people to appreciate the full weight
+of the speech it is of some importance to premise
+a brief account of the speaker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Guidi has belonged, almost ever since his
+entering the Dominican Order, to the convent of the
+Minerva. For a long time he belonged to the theological
+professoriate connected with the convent, and
+enjoyed, as such, the well-earned reputation of great
+learning and strict orthodoxy. When eleven years ago
+Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> wished to send thoroughly trustworthy and
+learned Roman theologians to the University of Vienna,
+to inculcate genuine Roman science and views on the
+young clergy, his eye fell on Father Guidi. After
+working there for some years he returned to Rome,
+having been meanwhile appointed Cardinal, and was
+soon afterwards made Archbishop of Bologna; and as
+the Italian Government promised to place no impediment
+in the way of his residing there, he actually
+betook himself to his See. But he soon found that it
+<pb n='673'/><anchor id='Pg673'/>
+was not the place for him. The Dominican Order had
+seriously compromised itself in the notorious Mortara
+affair, and accordingly the Bolognese rabble broke out
+repeatedly into the most deplorable demonstrations
+against the new Archbishop as a member of the hated
+Order. He therefore returned to Rome, and administered
+his diocese from hence. And here he was one of
+the Pope's favourites, only during the last year he has
+lost favour through his freedom of speech. Since then
+he has been prosecuting his theological studies in retirement,
+and it was pretty well known what he thought
+about the personal infallibility of the Pope. Several
+months ago he had assembled the Dominican Bishops
+at the Minerva about this affair. His view prevailed,
+and when Father Jandel, the General imposed on the
+Order by the Pope and reluctantly accepted, tried to
+put a pressure on them, they replied that they were
+Bishops, and were bound, as such, to consult their consciences
+when called to act as judges of faith. Then
+began a notable agitation in the Order, which was
+already divided into two camps. One arbitrary act
+followed another. A so-called academy of St. Thomas
+was opened, and hardly had the President taken his
+seat, when he made a long speech, expounding the
+<pb n='674'/><anchor id='Pg674'/>
+doctrine of St. Thomas and the Order on papal infallibility
+in the most tactless and violent manner to his
+episcopal audience. A Dominican Bishop delighted
+the Pope by getting up an infallibilist address among
+his episcopal colleagues. Then followed a series of
+writings defending St. Thomas against <hi rend='italic'>Janus</hi>. A
+member of the Order was forbidden by the General,
+Jandel, <q>to speak either publicly or privately about
+infallibility,</q> and the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà Cattolica</hi> of June 18
+praised the General for prefixing to the infallibilist
+writing of a Dominican the approbation that in the
+Dominican Order papal infallibility has always been
+held as a Catholic truth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under these circumstances people were the less prepared
+to find Cardinal Guidi, in contrast with his
+numerous sympathizers in the College of Cardinals,
+venturing boldly on a step which must embitter his
+whole existence at Rome. The very first sentence of
+his momentous speech must have concentrated the
+anger of the majority on a Cardinal, as they thought,
+so confused and oblivious of his duty. Guidi began
+by affirming that the separate and personal infallibility
+of the Pope, as stated in the amended chapter of the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, was wholly unknown in the Church up to the
+<pb n='675'/><anchor id='Pg675'/>
+fourteenth century inclusive. Proofs for it are vainly
+sought in Scripture and Tradition. The whole question,
+he added, reduces itself to the point whether the
+Pope has defined even one dogma alone and without
+the co-operation of the Church. No man could claim
+divine inspiration (<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>doctrina infusa</foreign>). An act might be
+infallible, a person never. But every infallible act had
+always proceeded from the Church herself only, either
+<q>per consilium Ecclesiæ sparsæ,</q> or <q>per Concilium.</q>
+To know <q>quid ubique credatur, si omnes Ecclesiæ
+cum Romanâ Ecclesiâ concordent,</q> information is indispensably
+required. After this examination the Pope
+sanctions doctrine <q>finaliter,</q> as St. Thomas says, and
+only so can it be rightly said <q>Omnes per Papam docent.</q>
+He then showed from the works of the Jesuits Bellarmine
+and Perrone, <q>in definendis dogmatibus Papas
+nunquam ex se solis egisse, nunquam hæresim per se
+solos condemnâsse.</q> As Guidi uttered these words the
+majority began to make a tumult under the lead of the
+Italian Spaccapietra, Bishop of Smyrna. The Cardinal
+saw he could not continue his speech. One bishop
+cried <q>birbante</q> (scoundrel) and another <q>brigantino.</q>
+But Guidi did not let himself be put out of countenance;
+he answered with astonishing firmness and calmness
+<pb n='676'/><anchor id='Pg676'/>
+that he had a right to be heard, and that no one had
+given to the Bishops the right of the Presidents.
+<q>However, the time will come yet for saying your
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> or your <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>, and then every one will be
+free to vote according to his conscience.</q> Here for the
+first time his speech was interrupted by loud applause,
+and the words <q>Optime, optime</q> resounded from every
+side among the Opposition Bishops. Manning was
+asked by one of them, who stood near him, <q>Etes-vous
+d'accord, Monsigneur?</q> He replied, <q>Le Cardinal est
+une tête confuse.</q> On this a high-spirited Bishop could
+not refrain from observing to the powerful Archbishop
+of Westminster, <q>C'est bien votre tête, Monseigneur,
+qui est confuse et plus qu'à moitié Protestante.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this pretty long interruption Guidi went on to
+require a change in the chapter on infallibility <q>ut
+clare appareat Papam agere consentientibus episcopis et
+illis occasione errorum qui sparguntur petentibus, factâ
+inquisitione in aliis Ecclesiis, præmisso maturo examine
+et judicio et consiliis fratrum aut collecto Concilio.</q> This
+was the true doctrine of St. Thomas; <q>finaliter</q> implied
+something to precede, and the words <q>supremus
+magister et judex</q> pre-suppose other <q>magistri</q> and <q>tribunalia.</q>
+He concluded by proposing these canons:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(1.) <q rend='pre'>Si quis dixerit decreta seu constitutiones a Petri
+<pb n='677'/><anchor id='Pg677'/>
+successore editas, continentes quandam fidei vel morum
+veritatem Ecclesiæ universæ ab ipso pro supremâ suâ
+et apostolicâ auctoritate propositas non esse extemplo
+omnimodo venerandas et toto corde credendas vel posse
+reformari&mdash;anathema sit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(2.) <q>Si quis dixerit Pontificem, cum talia edit decreta,
+posse agere arbitrio et ex se solo non autem ex consilio
+episcoporum traditionem Ecclesiarum exhibentium&mdash;anathema
+sit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On sitting down he gave his manuscript to the
+Secretary, and was soon surrounded by the leaders of
+the Opposition, some of whom complimented him on
+his speech, while others expressed their admiration of
+his courage in resisting the attempts to interrupt him.
+When a learned Italian Bishop asked Valerga, Patriarch
+of Jerusalem, what he thought of this speech, he replied
+audibly with the pun, <q>Si e squidato,</q> and on his interrogator
+rejoining that anyhow the speech contained
+nothing but the truth, Valerga let slip an expression
+very characteristic of himself and his party, <q>Si, ma
+non convien sempre dir la verità.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this speech a large number of Bishops left the
+Council Hall, and excited groups of prelates might
+be seen standing about in all directions. Cardinals
+Bonnechose and Cullen addressed their very pointless
+<pb n='678'/><anchor id='Pg678'/>
+speeches to empty benches. Both pleaded for the proclamation
+of the fourth chapter, as it stood. Bonnechose,
+from whom Ginoulhiac and others had expected
+a very moderate speech, proved that he had completely
+gone over into Manning's camp, which cannot surprise
+any one in the case of a man who himself made no
+secret of his having no clear views on the question.
+Cullen destroyed by his last speech the impression
+made by the first, which had been admired, not for its
+contents but for its strictly parliamentary form.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Guidi's courageous speech was destined
+soon to bear its fruits. The Pope&mdash;the dearest object
+of whose heart is the perfect freedom of the Council,
+as the official journal stated the other day&mdash;sent for
+him at once, and next day boasted to several Cardinals
+of having energetically rebuked their undutiful colleague
+for his heresy and ingratitude, and threatened him with
+being called on to renew his profession of faith. But
+the Cardinal may consider himself indemnified for
+these hard words of the Pope by the homage he received
+the day after his speech from almost the whole
+body of the Opposition Bishops who came to visit
+him. And he knows that the best of them were even
+worse treated by his Holiness than himself, where it
+was possible.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='679'/><anchor id='Pg679'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Fifty-Ninth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 22, 1870.</hi>&mdash;On the 13th the votes were
+taken on the changes proposed in the preamble, and
+taken by rising and sitting down.<note place='foot'>[This had been protested against by the minority. Cf. <hi rend='italic'>supr.</hi> pp. <ref target='Pg327'>327-8</ref>.]</note> Instead of <q>Vis et
+salus Ecclesiæ ab eo (Papâ) dependet</q> was proposed
+<q>Vis et soliditas in eo (Papâ) consistit.</q> The majority
+seem to have thought that stronger. The debate began
+with the speech of the Irish Archbishop of Cashel, a
+member of the Commission. It is precisely in our days,
+he said, that it is so necessary for the Pope to have
+absolute and irresponsible authority, for therein lies
+the one safeguard, first, against the encroachments of
+Liberalism; secondly, against the Radical and anti-Church
+policy of the Governments; thirdly, against the
+poisonous and unbridled influence of journalism; and
+fourthly, the absolute Pope can alone meet the ecclesiastical
+and national enterprises of Russia or subdue
+<pb n='680'/><anchor id='Pg680'/>
+the political sects and ward off the Revolution which
+is impending everywhere. In short, human society
+requires a deliverer, and this deliverer must be omnipotent
+and infallible. So it is said in the Commission,
+and the Irish prelate, who was specially alarmed by
+Fenianism, spoke in its name. As soon as the Pope
+with the assent of the Council&mdash;or indeed without it&mdash;has
+ruled his own omnipotence and infallibility, the
+deliverance of mankind is accomplished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French Benedictine, Cardinal Pitra, undertook to
+lift the assembly out of this cloudy region back to the
+firm ground of facts, viz., the facts disclosed by himself.
+He expatiated on the collection of canons in the Greek
+Church, saying that those relating to the Roman See
+had been falsified, and the Russian Church was above
+all implicated in this system of forgery, which had
+brought things to such a pass that there was no
+authentic collection of canons in the Oriental Church.
+This was probably intended to serve as a diversion, for
+the enormous fabrications in favour of papal omnipotence,
+which were carried on for centuries and are
+incorporated in the codes of canon law, had been frequently
+before referred to in a very suspicious manner
+in the Council. Even the Bishop of Saluzzo, who is
+<pb n='681'/><anchor id='Pg681'/>
+almost a thorough-going Roman absolutist, had called
+the collection of canons (Gratian's, etc.) an Augean
+stable. Pitra went on to indulge in an uncommonly
+fervid philippic against the Machiavellian and persecuting
+Russia. But he forgot to say one thing, viz., that
+in no country would the impending decrees be received
+with such satisfaction as in Russia, nowhere would they
+give greater pleasure than in that great Northern State
+which considers itself the happy heir of Rome in the
+East. So much must be known even in Rome, that
+on the day the dogma is promulgated all the bells in Mohilew,
+Wilna, Minsk, etc., will resound to ring the knell
+of Rome. Pitra was followed by Ramirez y Vasquez,
+Bishop of Badajoz. He maintained in the style and
+tone of Don Gerundio de Canpazes, the doctrine that
+the Pope is Christ in the Church, the continuation of
+the Incarnation of the Son of God, whence to him
+belongs the same extent of power as to Christ Himself
+when visibly on earth. Maret had announced his
+intention of speaking, with the view of combating the
+four anathemas of Dechamps, which were so manifestly
+directed against his book. But Dechamps, on learning
+this, told the Bishop of Sura that, if he would keep
+silence, he would withdraw his anathemas, and excused
+<pb n='682'/><anchor id='Pg682'/>
+himself by alleging his zeal for the new dogma, assuring
+Maret that he had a good heart and meant no harm.
+So Maret renounced his design of speaking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 14th, Haynald, in spite of his bodily suffering,
+delivered a long polemical speech against the majority,
+and maintained his reputation of being the best Latin
+speaker after Strossmayer. Jussuf, the Melchite
+Patriarch of Antioch, came next with an apology for
+the Oriental Churches and their liberties. He pointed
+out in earnest words the danger of their defection, if
+the present design of taking away their ancient rights
+was carried out. He produced letters from his home
+telling him that he had better not return at all than
+bring back from Rome decrees curtailing their ecclesiastical
+liberties. And if the Pope chose to send back
+another Patriarch instead of him, they might be very
+sure he would not be received. Bishop Krementz of
+Ermeland observed that Holy Scripture made, not
+Peter, or as is here understood the Pope, the foundation
+of the Church, but Christ, and then as secondary
+foundation the Apostles and Prophets. Only after
+these and in dependence on them could this designation
+be applied to the See of Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had indeed been already observed among the
+<pb n='683'/><anchor id='Pg683'/>
+minority how monstrous it was to make the Pope <q>the
+principle of unity in the Church,</q> as the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> puts
+it, and that the ancient Fathers speak indeed of an
+<q>exordium unitatis</q> established in the person of Peter,
+but had never called him, and still less the Bishop of
+Rome, the principle of ecclesiastical unity, which would
+be logically inconceivable. In the voting, which was
+again taken by rising and sitting down, the little band of
+dissentients disappeared before the consentient mass,
+and the expression <q>principium unitatis,</q> opposed as
+it is both to logic and tradition, was accepted. Before
+the voting Bishop Gallo of Avellino had uttered in the
+name of the Commission some Neapolitan mysticism
+about Adam and Eve and the mysteries already revealed
+in Adam and Eve of the Church resting on the Pope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Mathieu was the first speaker on the fourth
+chapter on infallibility. His long and powerful speech
+was mainly directed against Valerga, who had outraged
+the French by his attack on the <q>Gallican errors.</q> It
+was a well-delivered panegyric on the French nation,
+which had shed the blood of her sons to restore Rome
+to the Pope, and without whose troops at Civita Vecchia
+the Council could not remain in Rome. The only
+doubt is whether this Valerga is worth as much notice
+<pb n='684'/><anchor id='Pg684'/>
+as the French have accorded to him. After Mathieu
+Cardinal Rauscher spoke. His speech was very inaudible
+owing to the nature of the Council Hall, but
+was clear and well grounded, and showed how the
+acceptance of a personal infallibility, by virtue of which
+every utterance of a Pope must be believed by all
+Christians under pain of eternal damnation, is equally at
+issue with facts and with the former tradition of the
+Church, and must have a fatal effect in the future. He
+referred to Vigilius, Honorius, the reordinations of Sergius
+and Stephen, and the contradiction between
+Nicolas <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> and John <hi rend='smallcaps'>xxii.</hi>, and commended the formula
+of Antoninus requiring the consent of the Church as a
+condition. He could never assent to the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> without
+mortal sin. <q>We knew all that from your pamphlet,</q>
+said Dechamps while he was speaking. <q>But you have
+never refuted it,</q> replied Rauscher.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Pitra was to have followed, but he was
+unwell, and the sitting was broken off. The Presidents
+had issued an instruction that no one should speak out
+of his turn, and if prevented on the regular day should
+lose his right altogether. The rule in this case affected
+the zealous infallibilist Pitra, and accordingly the
+Bishops were dismissed before the usual hour.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='685'/><anchor id='Pg685'/>
+
+<p>
+The two next days, the 17th and 18th, were festivals,
+and there was no sitting held. As there are already
+75 speakers enrolled for the fourth chapter, the promulgation
+obviously cannot take place on June 29, and
+the Council will last on into July. There is indeed a
+simple means of gratifying the desire of the Pope and
+curtailing the pains of the Bishops, who are now absolutely
+tortured by the heat: the majority can any day
+cut short the special debate, as they have already cut
+short the general discussion. It may of course be objected
+that this procedure, of depriving the Bishops of
+their right of speaking and violently imposing silence
+upon them, overthrows the nature of a Church Council,
+where every Bishop is meant to bear witness not only to
+his own belief, but to the tradition of his country and the
+faith of his diocese. If the Bishops are deprived of this
+right&mdash;and that too where so momentous a question is
+at issue and there is such diversity of opinion&mdash;the
+freedom essential to a Council is wanting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Pope becomes more lavish of his admonitions and
+instructions every day. In the last Papal <hi rend='italic'>Capella</hi> Patrizzi
+assured him the faithful were impatiently awaiting
+the proclamation of infallibility, whereon Pius, in
+presence of several Bishops of the minority, replied that
+<pb n='686'/><anchor id='Pg686'/>
+there were three classes of opponents of the dogma,
+<emph>first</emph>, the gross ignoramuses, who did not know what it
+meant; <emph>secondly</emph>, the slaves of princes, he said <q>of
+Cæsar,</q> referring both to Vienna and Paris; <emph>thirdly</emph>, the
+cowards, who feared the judgment of this evil world.
+But he prayed for their enlightenment and conversion.<note place='foot'>The text of the speech, as it is now printed in the journals, has been
+subsequently corrected and toned down.</note>
+This was of course applied here universally to the
+Bishops of the Opposition. Moreover the Pope had
+just before had a letter written to certain canons of
+Besançon, saying that all the objections raised now had
+been triumphantly refuted a hundred times over, and
+that as to appealing to the results of historical criticism
+and the examination of texts, viz., to the huge mass
+of deliberate falsifications and forgeries, these were
+<q>des anciens sophismes ou mensonges contraires aux
+prérogatives du St. Siége.</q> The remark touches
+Rauscher, Schwarzenberg, Dupanloup, Hefele, Maret,
+Kenrick, Ketteler (in the pamphlet he circulated), and
+some thirty more. There is much dispute here as
+to the paternity of those views which Pius emits both
+orally and in writing. Has he got them from the
+<hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, or are the Jesuit writers of that journal only the
+<pb n='687'/><anchor id='Pg687'/>
+pupils of the Pope, who has received this information
+<q>by infused science</q> from the Virgin Mary? On that
+point opinions differ. The majority, who are quite
+aware that every one would think it a joke to call
+Giovanni Maria Mastai a learned theologian, hold to
+the latter view, and to the well-known picture painted
+by the Pope's own order, where the <q>actus infusionis</q>
+is represented to the eye. Their favourite watchword
+is that every one who does not accept the decree is, or
+in a few days will be, a heretic and enemy of the
+Church; his <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>non placet</foreign> consummates his separation
+from her, and hence Manning has already proposed that
+each of these Bishops should have his excommunication
+handed him with his railway-ticket when he leaves
+Rome. Livy says, <q>Hæc natura multitudinis est,
+aut servit humiliter aut superbe dominatur;</q> the
+<q>multitude</q> in the Hall combines both characteristics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On June 18 the Pope observed a German priest
+among those admitted to an audience, and asked who
+he was, when he replied that he was secretary to a
+Bishop, who is well known for his learning and his
+fallibilist views. Pius turned away with an exclamation
+of disgust. Of another very eminent dignitary of
+<pb n='688'/><anchor id='Pg688'/>
+similar views he is wont to say in the bitterest terms,
+that his opinions are prompted solely by personal enmity
+to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The majority are said to be very impatient, so that
+many anticipate the violent closing of the debate on
+Saturday, the 25th. And the greater number of the
+intending speakers on the fourth chapter, now increased
+to a hundred, belong to the Court party, who might say
+that they are only willingly renouncing the pleasure of
+hearing their own ideas put forward. But then the
+speeches of Darboy, Place (of Marseilles), Maret, Clifford,
+Schwarzenberg, Simor, Dupanloup, and Haynald
+would also be suppressed. Hefele was the first to put
+down his name, as he was not allowed at the time to
+answer the fierce attack of Cullen. On his inquiring
+after some days when his turn would come, he was told
+that he was the fifty-first in order, as all who came
+before him in age and rank must speak before he could
+be permitted to open his mouth. A little later he was
+told he came seventy-first, so that his hope of being
+able to vindicate himself in the Council is almost at an
+end. Meanwhile he has had a brief reply to the attack
+of a Frenchman, de la Margerie, printed at Naples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The minority have resolved to send a deputation to
+<pb n='689'/><anchor id='Pg689'/>
+the Pope to petition for the adjournment of the Council,
+since it is horrible to detain so many aged men, many
+of whom are sick, by violence in this unhealthy city.
+They will of course meet with a positive refusal, for the
+Jesuits and the holy Virgin, who is always appealed
+to, are for carrying out the compulsory system to the
+last. But you may judge how the heat and the moral
+and physical miasmas are working on the Bishops from
+the fact that there are now only five or six on a bench
+where thirty Bishops used to sit, though most of the
+others are in Rome or the neighbourhood. Indeed they
+are kept prisoners here, and Antonelli said recently to
+a diplomatist, <q>Si quelque Evêque veut faire une
+partie de campagne (like Förster) la police n'a rien à y
+voir, mais s'il voulait quitter le Concile, alors ce serait
+différent,</q> so that every foreign Bishop lives here under
+the inspection of the police, who are to take care that
+he does not escape. This statement seemed to the diplomat
+to whom it was made so seriously to affect the
+sovereign rights of his Government, that he at once
+reported it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Roman logic, as may be seen from the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, is
+simply this: the Council is what it is through the Pope
+alone; without him it can do nothing and is an empty
+<pb n='690'/><anchor id='Pg690'/>
+shadow. Freedom of the Council therefore means
+freedom of the Pope: if he is free, it is free. You may
+infer what reception will be accorded in the Vatican to
+the petition just resolved upon for a secret voting on
+the Papal <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>. There could be no more eloquent
+testimony to the real state of things and the estimate
+formed of the freedom of the Council, for it is dictated
+by the knowledge that a secret ballot would give a very
+considerable number of negative votes, at least 200, if
+the private expressions of opinion of the Bishops may
+be relied upon, while no one here ventures to hope for
+more than 110 or 115 <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>non placets</foreign> in a public voting.
+There are certainly some hundred, even of the Papal
+boarders, who would say <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>, if their votes were
+sheltered by secrecy. Neither the Catholic nor the
+non-Catholic public has any idea of the extent to which
+a Bishop in the present day is dependent on Rome, and
+how difficult or impossible the administration of his
+office would be made for him by the disfavour of
+Rome. The worst off of all are the Bishops under Propaganda,
+who have simply no rights. For them to
+speak of freedom, after the Pope has announced his
+wish, would be ludicrous, and to this category belong
+not only all the Oriental and Missionary Bishops, but
+<pb n='691'/><anchor id='Pg691'/>
+the American and English also. And even for the
+Bishops of the older Sees, who are under the <hi rend='italic'>Congregatio
+Episcoporum et Regularium</hi>, and are protected by the
+common law or by Concordats, the practice of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>
+is a field full of man-traps, a belt studded with nails,
+which only needs to be drawn in by curialistic hands to
+make the nails pierce the body of the obnoxious Bishop.
+As things now are here, and after Pius has gone
+further than any Pope for centuries in glaring partisanship
+and open threats of enmity against all dissentients,
+secret voting must appear the only possible means of
+securing even a shadow of freedom for the decrees of
+the Council. If the voting is public, the word freedom,
+as used of the Council, could only be regarded as
+a mockery. And it is very well known here that the
+Pope's <foreign rend='italic'>entourage</foreign> do everything in their power to maintain
+him in his belief that the Opposition will melt
+away at last like snow before the sun, and hardly four
+negative votes will remain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Last year the theologians summoned for the preliminary
+work were sent home at the beginning of June,
+and scarcely one or two even of the directing Commission
+of Cardinals stayed longer in Rome. Now the 15th or
+20th of July is spoken of as the day for the promulgation,
+<pb n='692'/><anchor id='Pg692'/>
+and if it should be a little earlier there will still
+be many of the prelates who will return from Rome ill
+and with their constitutions permanently shattered.
+The ancients found the word <q>amor</q> reversed in the
+name of the eternal city (<foreign lang='it' rend='italic'>Roma</foreign>), and the Bishops are daily
+reminded of it. Meanwhile the brilliant recompense
+of Cardoni's services has rekindled the hopes of the
+majority; there are fifteen or sixteen vacant Hats, which
+will be given to those who have deserved best of the
+new dogma. The merits of the Italians are not conspicuous;
+they have most of them done moles' work,
+chiefly as spies, for that business is conducted here to
+an extent almost unheard of in Europe. Valerga is of
+course an exception, who has excelled all the Italians
+as a speaker. After him, Mgr. Nardi has so greatly
+distinguished himself by his active zeal that a red Hat
+would seem a fitting ornament of his head, but then
+there are very suspicious circumstances, only too
+notorious in Rome. The men who have done and will
+do the most important services, who are indeed the
+modern Atlases to carry the main weight of the new
+dogma on their lusty shoulders, are of course the
+Jesuits. Pius is penetrated with the feeling that their
+services are above all praise and recompense. A
+<pb n='693'/><anchor id='Pg693'/>
+Jesuit cannot be rewarded with titles and colours and
+dresses, but he can receive a Cardinal's Hat. The names
+of Toletus, Bellarmine, Pallavicini, de Lugo, recall grand
+memories. Not long before its dissolution in 1736, three of
+the Order were in the Sacred College together&mdash;Tolomei,
+Eienfuegos and Salerno. That might happen again,
+and the College would gain in capacity and working
+power. As Kleutgen cannot be thought of, on account
+of his trial before the Inquisition, and Perrone is too
+old, the next candidates would be Curci, Schrader and
+Franzelin. Father Piccirillo, from his intimate relations
+to the highest personage, would possess the first
+reversionary claim, and his services have been rewarded
+in a manner greatly desired and long aimed at
+by his Order, for he has received the permission, unprecedented
+in the history of Rome, to go alone into the
+secret archives and there work. Such an event would
+at other times have been regarded at Rome as a downfall
+of the heavens or a sign of the last judgment, and
+even now it has produced perplexity and amazement
+in genuine Roman circles. For every one who
+passes the threshold of the chamber of archives incurs
+<foreign rend='italic'>ipso facto</foreign> excommunication. So the Order is firmly
+seated in this unapproachable sanctuary. There is no
+<pb n='694'/><anchor id='Pg694'/>
+fear of indiscreet publications. Piccirillo, far from
+publishing anything, will excel in mere negative activity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among foreign candidates for the Cardinalate Manning
+stands out as a star of the first rank in the Roman
+firmament. He may claim some paternity of the great
+idea of at last treating the apotheosis of the Papacy
+seriously, and he long ago suggested to Darboy how
+nice it would be for the two chief capitals of Europe,
+London and Paris, each to have its Cardinal, which
+could be best brought about by furthering the infallibilist
+definition. But Darboy would hear nothing of it.
+Next to Manning comes Dechamps of Mechlin; but
+as the Pope has named him primate, which is indeed a
+mere title, he is thought here to have had his reward.
+Spalding, who has deserved so well of Rome, would of
+course create a great sensation in the United States
+by the red hat, which has never yet been seen there.
+Among the French, Dreux-Brézé of Moulins and Pie
+of Poitiers come first in order. There is great difficulty
+about Simor, the ill-advised and ungrateful son who
+had the Cardinalate, so to speak, in his pocket, and is
+now causing such distress to the lofty giver. How fortunate,
+say the Court party, that d'Andrea is no longer
+<pb n='695'/><anchor id='Pg695'/>
+alive. Rauscher, Schwarzenburg, Guidi, d'Andrea,
+Simor&mdash;that would be too much. But now for the
+Germans! There it is difficult to select; all the faithful
+ones must be rewarded, who have literally sweated
+and are sweating daily in the interest of the good cause&mdash;Fessler,
+Martin, Senestrey, and then Stahl, Leonrod,
+Rudigier and the Tyrolese Gasser and Riccabona. The
+Tyrol has had no Cardinal since Nicolas of Cusa (Bishop
+of Brixen) and Madrucci (Bishop of Trent), and there
+most especially would the return of a countryman with
+a red hat be kept as a national festival.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Margotti has had a denial inserted in the <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>
+of the fact that a Sicilian Bishop related the story of
+St. Peter and the Virgin Mary in the Council Hall.
+On this I have merely to remark that it was told me
+the same evening by three Bishops, none of whom heard
+it from one of the others, and the speaker was Natoli,
+Archbishop of Messina. We know what Margotti's
+assertions and denials are worth.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='696'/><anchor id='Pg696'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixtieth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 23, 1870.</hi>&mdash;On reading the last document
+emanating from the Council, composed by the
+most distinguished of the American Bishops, an inexpressible
+feeling of astonishment comes over me, as
+often before, at the new and unprecedented spectacle
+so boldly offered to the startled world, and I again
+recognise the necessity of accounting to myself for the
+condition of the Catholic Church which has made this
+possible, and remembering that the position of the
+Papacy in the modern Church for some time past has
+been hardly less novel and strange than this present
+infallibilist Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two great events of modern history, the Reformation
+and the Revolution, have made the Papacy what
+it is,&mdash;the Reformation by forcibly driving the Catholic
+half of Christendom into centralization, the Revolution
+by removing the last remaining independent powers
+<pb n='697'/><anchor id='Pg697'/>
+within the Church, viz., the Gallican Church with the
+Sorbonne and Parliament. So it came to pass that
+with the Restoration the Church was surrendered to
+the discretion of the Papacy, just as at the same time
+the Roman States, by the withdrawal of all provincial
+and corporate independence, became a uniform and
+absolute monarchy. The very spirit of the nineteenth
+century, without much help from Rome, contributed to
+the consolidation and strengthening of this new system.
+The re-awakening and growth of distinct Church feeling
+in powerful classes of the educated nations, the legitimist
+ideas of the ruling classes of Europe, and later
+on the combined Catholic and Liberal interest of the
+struggle against hostile bureaucracies and the antipathy
+of parliamentary majorities&mdash;principles of reaction and
+principles of freedom all alike in turn subserved the
+cause of the Church, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the Papacy. For although
+Papacy and Church were still not wholly identified in
+fact, to say nothing of right, the times did not suggest
+the need for distinguishing between them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was opportunity given, one might suppose,
+for a great display of activity. A fresh creative spirit
+passed here and there through the new world of the
+nineteenth century, and not least through the Catholic
+<pb n='698'/><anchor id='Pg698'/>
+portion of it, which produced in individuals many fair
+flowers of art and science, and also of practical piety.
+It was enough to catch the inspiration, in the sense of
+the age and of the eternal needs of mankind, and as
+the wilderness blossoms under the hand of a gardener,
+there grew out of the ruins of the Revolution a new
+era of rich Christian life. But the destiny of Catholicism
+was to be the reverse. There was indeed then, and is
+now, urgent need of an immense deal to be done in the
+Church; to carry on the daily ecclesiastical administration
+by no means satisfied the requirements of the age,
+but the Church herself needed and needs reform&mdash;reform
+everywhere from the outer rind to the marrow.
+But reform, whether in Church or State, generally
+results from the struggle of rival forces. And the only
+power surviving in the Church possessed neither the
+capacity nor the inclination for acts of world-wide
+import; it seemed to have no sense but for the maintenance
+and extension of its own dominion. Such
+Catholic works as the nineteenth century has produced
+did not emanate from Rome, and were little if at all
+helped on by her. On the contrary, Rome put a restraint
+on everything which did not serve directly as an instrument
+of her power. Every germ of relative independence
+<pb n='699'/><anchor id='Pg699'/>
+seemed to be viewed with distrust. Here and
+there the intellectual labour of a lifetime of Catholic
+study was simply extinguished. The youth of talent
+turned from a path which led only to unfruitful conflicts.
+The once promising seed-plot of original Catholic
+production became dry, and even the noblest creation
+of the century, the female orders for nursing the sick,
+are said by those best informed to show symptoms of
+decay. There was stillness. From Rome one only
+heard a monologue. The Bishops' Pastorals were its
+echo, or were so long-winded and verbose that the
+simple and noble language of the pronunciamento
+issued by the newly elected Bishop of Rottenburg was
+quite a phenomenon. Men boasted of the Catholic
+unity, which had never been so palpable and so undisturbed
+as in these latter days, but it was a unity of sleep
+over the grave of intellectual and all higher ecclesiastical
+life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who will bring us deliverance? asked every one who
+looked at things independently of the mere force of
+habit with a clear eye. The answer was that there
+was no longer any independent power anywhere but
+in the centre, and therefore deliverance could only
+come from thence; the lever could only be applied in
+<pb n='700'/><anchor id='Pg700'/>
+Rome, and nobody but a future Pope was in a position
+to do this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How peculiarly are things disposed! In Rome they
+had all they could desire. There has never been a
+time when Catholic Christendom lay so submissively
+at the Pope's feet. In fact he possessed practically the
+prerogative of infallibility, for no one contradicted
+whatever he might say. The Bishops were disused to
+learning; there was hardly among them a theologian of
+note, and therefore they had no spirit for theological
+convictions of their own. It seemed to be the office of
+their lives to re-echo the Roman oracles. The daring
+project of defining the Immaculate Conception met
+with hardly any serious opposition, though many Bishops
+could not conceal from themselves that the faith of
+antiquity and the belief of their own dioceses knew
+nothing of the new dogma. And then in the Encyclical
+and Syllabus came a perfect flood of irrational and
+unchristian propositions. What did the Bishops of
+Christendom, the judges of faith, do? Some put a
+more rational interpretation on it, the others took it all
+for granted as it stood; everywhere the new articles of
+faith and morality were received as though all were in
+the most regular order. That was in fact a situation
+<pb n='701'/><anchor id='Pg701'/>
+without any precedent, and there was nothing left to
+wish for but its continuance for ever. The talisman
+to secure this continuance was discovered in the tenet of
+papal infallibility, and to make this into a dogma and
+foundation-principle of the Church has been the grand
+object to which the thoughts and measures of the last
+ten years have been directed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even this last point might perhaps have been
+attained by adhering to the practice which has prevailed
+hitherto of quietly collecting the votes of the
+<foreign rend='italic'>Ecclesia dispersa</foreign>, and passing over the isolated opponents
+still left to the order of the day. Why was the
+perilous plan of a General Council adopted instead of
+this? Perhaps with the view of extruding and getting
+rid of for the future all the doubt still attaching to
+the assent of the Church dispersed; certainly in the
+full confidence, after all that had occurred previously,
+that there was absolutely no demand the Bishops would
+dare to refuse. The authorities felt in the position,
+ecclesiastically speaking, of being able to challenge the
+Holy Ghost Himself to say if He would refuse to set
+His seal to the deformation of the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the world knows how the Vatican Council has
+been managed. It was as if they wished to keep the
+<pb n='702'/><anchor id='Pg702'/>
+Holy Ghost a prisoner, with eyes and ears bandaged.
+But things did not go as they wished. On the contrary
+this extreme step of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> roused a reaction,
+which seems likely to lead to a revolution that will take
+its place in history and introduce a complete change
+in the future. Certainly the deliverance is coming
+from the centre, but not as was thought and desired,
+not in peace but in storm, not as a gift of the highest
+human wisdom but as a nemesis. For it is an old law,
+equally prevalent throughout the Christian and Heathen
+world, that pride will always bring its punishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We are already in the third stage of this movement.
+First came, quite unexpectedly, protests against infallibility
+from the lay world, instead of the accustomed
+clouds of incense, and then still more unexpectedly the
+military obedience of the clergy was broken through
+by the most decided intimations of conscientious sincerity
+and scientific conviction; and now even the
+princes of the Church are putting themselves at the
+head of the Opposition. There is still some difference
+between the Church dispersed and a great assembly,
+many as are the restrictions imposed here by fraud and
+violence on the free expression of opinion. The man
+of knowledge and character, who would there remain
+<pb n='703'/><anchor id='Pg703'/>
+alone and isolated, gains tenfold power and energy here.
+Consciences are aroused. Many a Bishop who left
+home with his head wholly or half involved in the haze
+of Jesuit doctrine, receives the impulse here to unprejudiced
+study and is irresistibly driven to the side of
+right and truth. Besides, it is no small thing to have
+seen the state of things at Rome for six months with
+one's own eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We shall do well not to raise our expectations too
+high. The spirit of slavery, which has become ingrained
+in one generation after another, cannot be scared away
+in weeks and months from men's minds and the conduct
+of affairs. So much the more noteworthy is every
+increase of outward or inward strength in the struggling
+minority at the Council. And so I return to the
+work already mentioned, to remark that its contents
+justify us in reckoning the author, the venerable Archbishop
+Kenrick of St. Louis, with Strossmayer, Hefele,
+Dupanloup, Darboy, Schwarzenberg, and Rauscher
+among the heads of the Opposition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is only matter of course that much which has
+often been said before should be repeated here, which
+we may pass over, without however omitting to
+notice the impression which the plain and practical
+<pb n='704'/><anchor id='Pg704'/>
+nature of the treatise is calculated to produce. What
+concerns us more nearly is the distinctness and firmness
+with which the present claims of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> are repudiated,
+as, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, in pointing out the injury to episcopal
+rights involved in the desired definition. <q>The Bishops,</q>
+says the author, <q>have always been held judges of faith.
+But assuming that the Pope alone is infallible, the Bishops
+may indeed assent to his judgments, but cannot exercise
+any real judicial office, and thus lose a right inherent in
+the episcopal office. But this right they are in no position
+to resign, however much they might wish it, for its
+connection with the episcopal office rests on the institution
+of the Saviour.</q> In another passage he says,
+<q>Appeal is made to the number of theologians, who in
+the course of ages have defended infallibility. But that
+does not make it an article of faith. Divine Providence
+does not permit such opinions, when they have no true
+ground or do not agree with the records of revelation, to
+become articles of faith. It has been a view held for centuries
+that Christ gave Peter and his successors supreme
+authority in secular affairs also. But there is no one in
+our own day who does not reject and deplore it and seek
+for an excuse for it in the circumstances of the age,
+except the Roman clergy, in whose <foreign rend='italic'>Proprium Officium S.
+<pb n='705'/><anchor id='Pg705'/>
+Zachariæ</foreign> we read the other day, that the Pope by his
+apostolic authority transferred the sovereignty over the
+Franks from Childeric to Pepin. And yet the Popes
+have ventured to make this usurped authority, so far as
+in them lay, into an article of faith.</q> Then follows a
+reference to the Bull <hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi>, and the similar
+statements of Bellarmine and Suarez. <q>On the other
+hand,</q> Kenrick proceeds, <q>we find at this Council
+some Bishops, of whom the present writer is one, who
+have published and solemnly sworn to a declaration that
+the Pope, at least in England, possesses no such power.
+This example might teach those who are pressing for
+the definition of papal infallibility, that even the most
+solemn papal decree, and though issued like that of
+Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi> at a Synod, is null and void if it be not
+grounded on God's word in Scripture and Tradition.
+<q>Commenta delet dies, judicia naturæ confirmat.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We may recognise in the tone of these remarks, with
+all their moderation, an advance on the part of the
+Opposition to greater freedom and distinctness of speech.
+And this impression is still more confirmed by Kenrick's
+judgment on the well-known proceedings in and out of
+Council. <q>There is yet another argument used,</q> he
+says, <q>which I can only refer to with reluctance. It
+<pb n='706'/><anchor id='Pg706'/>
+is urged that papal infallibility is so vehemently
+attacked by its opponents that, if it is not now declared
+to be an article of faith, it is virtually admitted
+to have no foundation, and surrendered to the daily
+increasing violence of its assailants without protection.
+Those who so argue forget that they are themselves
+responsible for having occasioned this deplorable controversy,
+by announcing to the astonished world that at
+the Vatican Council two new dogmas would be proposed
+to the faithful, papal infallibility and the Assumption
+of the Blessed Virgin, and in a similar spirit
+publishing works in England and the United States on
+the Pope's authority, with a view of preparing men's
+minds for the acceptance of these dogmas. In view of
+this temerity, which has not only not been rebuked but
+has even been defended in Bishops' Pastorals, and with a
+clear perception of the unhappy consequences that must
+follow from it, men, who deserve eternal remembrance
+and will obtain praise of God, have lifted up their
+voice to remind the faithful that in matters of faith no
+innovation is allowed, that papal infallibility as distinct
+from the infallibility of the Church has no evidence of
+Scripture and Tradition, and that the office of Councils
+is to investigate and not to carry decrees by acclamation.
+<pb n='707'/><anchor id='Pg707'/>
+And just because they speak the truth openly, these men
+are reproached with stirring up the people by the very
+persons who would eventually have interpreted their
+silence as assent and have used it as ground for carrying
+out their own designs. Then again it is urged upon
+good people that something must be done under the
+circumstances for maintaining the honour of the Papacy,
+forgetting that Bishops should have not circumstances
+but the truth before their eyes, and that it is as little
+competent to the successors of the Apostles as to the
+Apostles themselves to do anything against the truth,
+but only for the truth.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In another passage, after dwelling on the preponderance
+of the Italian prelates he proceeds, <q>If they wish
+to give the decrees of the Council the character of the
+testimony of the whole of Christendom, without altering
+the inequality of numbers of the representatives of
+different nations, there is the precedent of the plan
+adopted at the Council of Constance with the happiest
+results, viz., taking the votes by nations or languages
+and not by heads. And this method would secure the
+speedier and better settlement of the matters under
+discussion, for the Bishops of the same tongue or nation
+know the needs of their Churches better and would
+<pb n='708'/><anchor id='Pg708'/>
+understand how to meet them; moreover they could
+express their views more readily in their mother tongue
+than is possible in the General Congregation where
+Latin is obliged to be spoken, which they have perhaps
+lost their familiarity with through the long course of an
+active life, so that they have either to keep silent or to
+speak under difficulties. And by this means a discussion
+and searching examination would become practicable,
+which must necessarily take place at a Council,
+but which is wanting at the Vatican Council. There is
+indeed abundant opportunity for making speeches, but
+the great number of Fathers and the order of business
+imposed on the Council cuts off all opportunity for
+submitting any point to a close examination by regular
+debate with one speaker answering another. Five
+months have already passed since the opening of the
+Council, with what result need not be said here.
+Meanwhile the question of the new definition has
+roused a great excitement throughout the Christian
+world, which is still on the increase; some desire the
+definition, others emphatically repudiate it. Bishops
+have entered the lists against Bishops, priests have
+written against their own and against other chief
+pastors, and won commendation from the supreme
+<pb n='709'/><anchor id='Pg709'/>
+authority for doing so. The journals of both parties,
+with their not always true reports or at least crooked
+reasonings, keep the whole world in a state of agitated
+suspense as to what is coming. May one say to what
+all this will lead and what will be the end of this
+violent tempest which has so suddenly risen in a clear
+sky and seems likely to produce much mischief? They
+are certainly deceived who fancy that the promulgation
+of the new dogma will at once lay the waves; the contrary
+is far likelier. Those who would obey the decrees
+of the Council will find themselves in a most difficult
+position. The civil Governments will treat them, not
+without some plausible grounds, as less trustworthy
+subjects. The enemies of the Church will throw in
+their teeth the errors said to have been taught by the
+Popes or sanctioned by their conduct, and will laugh to
+scorn the only possible answer&mdash;that they did not promulgate
+these errors as Popes but as individual Bishops
+of Rome. And then the scandalous Church history
+records of certain Popes will be urged as so many
+proofs of the internal discrepancy of Catholic belief,
+for men do not distinguish between infallibility and
+impeccability, which appear to them inseparably connected.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='710'/><anchor id='Pg710'/>
+
+<p>
+What Kenrick thinks the Opposition ought to do is
+not expressly stated, but may be gathered from his
+language. He says indeed that <q>whoever does not
+submit to the decisions of an Œcumenical Council does
+not deserve the name of Catholic,</q> but he adds, <q>if the
+indispensable conditions have been observed in holding
+the Council.</q> And he makes moral unanimity one of
+these conditions. He does not allow the crude conception
+which seems to prevail among the majority, that a
+Council has simply to vote and then the world must
+reverence the result as the dictate of the Holy Ghost.
+The infallibility of Councils is to him no miraculous
+work of inspiration, but a simple result of the constitution
+the Church received from her Founder, whose
+assistance will never fail her, if she remains true to
+Scripture and Tradition and the agreement of the various
+particular Churches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Kenrick and all the Bishops who hold firmly with
+him may meet the impending decision in quietness and
+confidence, for the defeat of their opponents is certain,
+whether they persist and define and promulgate the
+new dogma, or retreat at the last moment. In the
+former case deliverance will come through a catastrophe
+whose consequences defy all calculation. And yet even
+<pb n='711'/><anchor id='Pg711'/>
+in Rome there do not lack pious minds which, undisturbed
+by these terrible dangers, desire to see the
+insolent enterprise carried through, in the belief that
+the prevalent corruption can only be overcome by a life
+and death struggle. <q>Quod medicina non sanat, ferrum
+sanat.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='712'/><anchor id='Pg712'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixty-First Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 24, 1870.</hi>&mdash;Rome is just now like an
+episcopal lazar-house, so great is the number of the
+prelates who are sick and suffering and confined to
+their bed or their chamber. And still greater is the
+number of those who feel worn out and impatiently
+long to be gone. But there are persons here who calculate
+thus&mdash;that the Italians, Spaniards and South
+Americans are accustomed to the heat, and bear it very
+well, and as to the Germans, French and North Americans&mdash;<q>vile
+damnum si interierint.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guidi's speech still occupies men's minds, and forms
+the topic of conversation in conciliar circles. Men are
+astonished at the courage of a Cardinal in daring so
+directly to contradict the Pope. While Pius has word
+written to Paris that <q>for many centuries no one
+doubted the Pope's infallibility,</q> Guidi declares it to be
+an invention of the fifteenth century.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='713'/><anchor id='Pg713'/>
+
+<p>
+The following account of the dialogue between the
+Pope and the Cardinal is current at Rome, and it seems
+to rest on the authority of Pius himself, who is notoriously
+fond of telling every one he meets how he has
+lectured this or that dignitary:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guidi, on being summoned by the Pope directly after
+his speech, was greeted with the words, <q>You are my
+enemy, you are the coryphæus of my opponents, ungrateful
+towards my person; you have propounded
+heretical doctrine.</q> <hi rend='italic'>Guidi.</hi>&mdash;<q>My speech is in the
+hands of the Presidents, if your Holiness will read it,
+and detect what is supposed to be heretical in it. I
+gave it at once to the under-secretary (<foreign rend='italic'>sottosecretario</foreign>)
+that people might not be able to say anything had been
+interpolated into it.</q> <hi rend='italic'>The Pope.</hi>&mdash;<q>You have given
+great offence to the majority of the Council; all five
+Presidents are against you and are displeased.</q> <hi rend='italic'>Guidi.</hi>&mdash;<q>Some
+material error may have escaped me, but
+certainly not a formal one: I have simply stated the
+doctrine of tradition and of St. Thomas.</q> <hi rend='italic'>The Pope.</hi>&mdash;<q><foreign lang='it' rend='italic'>La
+tradizione son' io&mdash;vi farò far nuovamente la professione
+di fede.</foreign></q> <hi rend='italic'>Guidi.</hi>&mdash;<q>I am and remain subject
+to the authority of the Holy See, but I ventured to
+discuss a question not yet made an article of faith; if
+<pb n='714'/><anchor id='Pg714'/>
+your Holiness decides it to be such in a Constitution,
+I shall certainly not dare to oppose it.</q> <hi rend='italic'>The Pope.</hi>&mdash;<q>The
+value of your speech may be measured by those
+whom it has pleased. Who has been eager to testify
+to you his joy? That Bishop Strossmayer who is my
+personal enemy has embraced you; you are in collusion
+with him.</q> <hi rend='italic'>Guidi.</hi>&mdash;<q>I don't know him, and have
+never before spoken to him.</q> <hi rend='italic'>The Pope.</hi>&mdash;<q>It is clear
+you have spoken so as to please the world, the Liberals,
+the Revolution, and the Government of Florence.</q>
+<hi rend='italic'>Guidi.</hi>&mdash;<q>Holy Father, have the goodness to have my
+speech given you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same afternoon a Spanish Bishop belonging to
+the extremest Infallibilists said, <q>Absque dubio facies
+Concilii est immutata. Oportet huic sermoni serio
+studere.</q> When Guidi asked how the Cardinals had
+taken his speech, Mathieu replied, <q>Cum seriâ silentiosâ
+approbatione,</q> on which Guidi observed, <q>Sunt
+quidam qui idem mecum sentiunt, sed deest illis animi
+fortitudo.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>La tradizione son' io</q>&mdash;it would be impossible to
+give a briefer, more pregnant or more epigrammatic description
+of the whole system which is now to be made
+dominant than is contained in those few words. All
+<pb n='715'/><anchor id='Pg715'/>
+the members of the <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, the thick volumes of Schrader,
+Weninger and the Jesuits of Laach are outdone by
+this clear and simple utterance. Pius will take rank in
+history with the men who have known how by a happy
+inspiration to throw a great thought into the most
+adequate form of words, which impresses it for ever indelibly
+on the memory. The formula is worthy to be
+classed with the equally pregnant saying of Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>,
+<q>The Pope holds all rights locked up in his breast.</q>
+It is bruited about here from mouth to mouth, and the
+analogy of Louis <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi>, which inevitably occurs to everybody,
+reaches even further. Every day since I have
+witnessed the drama being enacted here, has the saying
+suggested itself to me, <q>L'Église, c'est moi.</q> Any
+one who would form a judgment of the state of things
+here should be recommended above all to read a work
+like, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, Lemontey's <hi rend='italic'>Essai sur l'établissement monarchique
+de Louis <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi></hi>, or the instructions of the King for
+the Dauphin. One sees there how absolute sovereignty,
+the intoxicating sense of irresponsible power&mdash;and
+spiritual absolutism is far more overpowering than
+political&mdash;leads almost of necessity to the notion of
+infallibility and divine enlightenment. Louis <hi rend='smallcaps'>xiv.</hi> says
+seriously and drily to his son, <q>As God's representative
+<pb n='716'/><anchor id='Pg716'/>
+we have part in the divine knowledge as well as the
+divine authority.</q><note place='foot'><q>Il est sans doute de certaines fonctions où, tenant, pour ainsi dire, la
+place de Dieu, nous semblons être participants de sa connaissance, aussi
+bien que de son autorité,</q> etc.&mdash;Lemontey, p. 151 (éd. de Bruxelles).</note> And he warns him that all his own
+errors had arisen from his too great modesty in giving
+ear to extraneous advisers. For eight hundred years the
+question has been disputed, why the Popes are so short-lived,
+and the phenomenon has been ascribed to a special
+divine dispensation which removes them betimes, that
+they may not be morally poisoned by too long enjoyment
+of their dignity&mdash;<q>ne malitia mutaret intellectum.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The minority perceive, on a calmer consideration,
+that the two canons proposed by Guidi would not
+provide sufficient security for the episcopate taking part
+in the teaching office of the Church according to the
+integrity of her constitution. The second indeed, like
+a well-aimed arrow, hits the mark. It calls the thing
+by its right name, and anathematizes the purely personal
+infallibility of the Pope, independent of the consent of
+the Church and resting on direct divine inspiration, as
+a heresy, which it unquestionably is in the eyes of
+every theologian who knows anything of the Church
+and her tradition; but then, after the Pope has so
+<pb n='717'/><anchor id='Pg717'/>
+openly and expressly committed himself to precisely
+this view of the Church, it is thought impossible here
+in Rome, and close to the Vatican, to throw an anathema
+in his face. And besides the expression in the first
+canon, that the consentient <q>consilium Ecclesiæ</q> is
+requisite for an infallible papal utterance, is open to
+the same charge of vagueness as the notorious and
+much-abused <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign>, and could as easily be explained
+away into the mere arbitrary caprice of the
+Pope. It would always rest with him in the last
+resort to maintain <q>ex certâ scientiâ</q> that the <q>consilium
+Ecclesiæ</q> agreed with his own judgment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A remodelling of the fourth canon has been undertaken,
+but the new formula is not known. It is however
+much talked of among the Bishops, and the
+general view is that it remains substantially unchanged,
+and still contains the personal infallibility of the Pope
+independently of the Church. Manning had said that
+the utmost regard that was possible should be paid to
+the views of the Opposition in the alteration of the
+chapter. And so those Bishops still hope for the
+accomplishment of their desires who, like Ketteler and
+Melchers, entreat that only one, however sterile, verbal
+concession may be made, so as to give them a bridge
+<pb n='718'/><anchor id='Pg718'/>
+on which to pass over the gulf safely into the camp of
+the majority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I lately heard a Roman layman say that what most
+surprised him among the many wonderful things he
+had seen here was the contempt for the Catholic
+Church which prevails here. For that contempt could
+not be more emphatically expressed than by the Pope
+appropriating to himself what according to the ancient
+doctrine belongs to her, and declaring himself the sole
+and exclusive organ of the Holy Ghost. It is the same
+here universally; when one talks with a Roman, the
+<hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, the Pope, is everything, and the Church nothing
+but the <q>contribuens plebs.</q> My informant thought it
+was easy enough to understand the view of born Romans,
+but difficult to give any rational account of the attitude
+of the episcopal majority, for it must be clear to every
+one of them that the promulgation of the new dogma
+would destroy irrevocably all episcopal independence
+of Rome, and strip the nimbus from the brow of the
+Bishop who is a successor of the Apostles. I observed
+to him that in Romance countries this primitive idea
+of the episcopate had long since vanished, as he might
+easily convince himself by asking the next Italian
+peasant or shopkeeper he met what was his notion
+<pb n='719'/><anchor id='Pg719'/>
+of a Bishop. And five-sixths of the majority belong
+to these countries,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the Congregation of June 20 the Deputation put
+up one of its members, Bishop d'Avanzo of Calvi and
+Teano, to speak. For there was urgent need of promptly
+meeting the great scandal given by Guidi, and deterring
+any Cardinal who might be so disposed from following
+his example. The speaker allowed that in dogmatic
+decrees the tradition of the Church must be consulted
+and the Holy Ghost invoked, but how this was to be
+done was left to the judgment of the Pope, By his
+second canon Guidi passed over <q>ad aliena non Catholica
+castra,</q> exceeded all Gallicans and wanted&mdash;he, an
+Italian, a Dominican and a Cardinal&mdash;to canonize Gallicanism.
+A shudder ran through the ranks of all the
+Italians who live between Ferrara and Malta, but they
+remembered for their comfort that the unworthy son of
+the peninsula had been for some years professor at
+Vienna, and it was obvious that the German malaria he
+had caught there was the cause of this matricidal heresy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guidi had said that the admonition to Peter to confirm
+his brethren pre-supposed something to be confirmed,
+<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, that the Pope only confirmed the doctrine
+already maintained by the Bishops. To this d'Avanzo
+<pb n='720'/><anchor id='Pg720'/>
+answered that it was utterly uncatholic, and one must
+rather begin from above and not from below, and
+ascribe the authorship and initiation of doctrine to the
+Pope, who was immediately inspired by the Holy Ghost;
+<q>causa princeps infallibilitatis est assistentia Spiritûs
+Sancti.</q> And here followed a statement that must be
+given word for word: <q>Supervacaneum est omne
+additamentum, nulla emendatio in decreto et canone
+schematis acceptatur; nulla conditio, nulla limitatio
+admittetur per deputationem; inutilis est igitur omnis
+labor? <q>Animalis homo non percipit quod de cœlo
+est.</q></q><note place='foot'>1 Cor. ii. 14.</note> To say the definition was inopportune was
+merely pandering to the corrupt portion of society, and
+especially to the tribe of Government officials. The
+speaker added emphatically: <q>Satis fit servis Satanæ,
+qui sunt gubernantes, negantes ordinem supernaturalem&mdash;ergo
+Decretum est opportunum. In Pontifice
+Spiritus Domini vivit et agit, Pontifex ergo hôc Spiritu
+agente errare non potest.</q> It became known at once
+in the Council that this declaration, which annihilated
+so many hopes, had been made in the name and by
+special command of the Pope, and that <q>the animal
+man</q> meant the Opposition.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='721'/><anchor id='Pg721'/>
+
+<p>
+The two next speakers were the titular Patriarchs
+Ballerini and Valerga. The first said with notable
+frankness, <q>Were we to let personal infallibility drop,
+we should destroy the obedience due to the Pope and
+exalt ourselves against God Himself.</q> In other words,
+the Vice-God orders us to declare him infallible, and of
+course we obey implicitly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Valerga's appearance was the beginning of a comedy,
+which was repeated in subsequent sittings. He wanted
+to prove papal infallibility by inferences from the
+Florentine decree, which was received by all; but he
+was twice interrupted by the Presidents for not keeping
+to the question. He thereupon left the tribune, not
+without remarks being made by Opposition Bishops
+that they saw this treatment was not reserved for them
+only. The same thing happened on June 22 to Bishop
+Apuzzo of Sorrento and Archbishop Spaccapietra. On
+the 20th, towards the end of the debate, Archbishop
+MacHale of Tuam in Ireland spoke with great severity
+against the decree, the fatal consequences of which he
+seems to appreciate better than most of his Irish colleagues.
+Bishop Apuzzo reminded the Hungarians that
+they once had a primate (Szelepcsenyi, a pupil of the
+Jesuits) who had summoned a synod to condemn the
+<pb n='722'/><anchor id='Pg722'/>
+Gallican Articles of 1682, and that quite recently a
+Provincial Synod at Colocza had used language of very
+infallibilist sound. Haynald took part in that Synod,
+and he, as well as Rauscher, to whom the same reproach
+was addressed, had already observed that it would not
+do to put a strictly logical interpretation on mere
+complimentary phrases. In the course of his speech
+Apuzzo became still more abusive. <q>Those are the
+sons of Satan,</q> he exclaimed at last, <q>who say the
+Bishops are judges in the Church. No! we are but
+poor sinners.</q> At the same time he proposed a supplement
+still more peremptory than the chapter. Spaccapietra
+came to grief in Church history, which is more
+grossly mishandled at Rome and in the Council Hall,
+when it is appealed to at all, than anywhere else. This
+time St. Polycarp's yielding to the Pope about the
+observance of Easter&mdash;he notoriously did just the reverse&mdash;was
+to serve as an example to the Opposition.
+When the speaker went on to utter fierce invectives
+against Cardinal Guidi, he was interrupted. He declared
+he had only something to say against the schismatics,
+but the President closed his mouth in theatrical fashion
+saying, <q>Cedat verbum tintinnabulo.</q> So he left the
+rostrum.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='723'/><anchor id='Pg723'/>
+
+<p>
+Men breathed more freely when, after these hollow
+declamations, two British Bishops brought the clear
+practical sense of their race and country to bear on the
+question and the previous discussion of it. The first of
+them, Archbishop Errington, who was formerly Cardinal
+Wiseman's coadjutor but soon got out of favour
+at Rome, pointedly characterized the vicious nature of
+the whole transaction; there were speeches on both
+sides, one affirming, another denying, and no one could
+feel that he had refuted anything or advanced his
+cause the least by his words. The Deputation alone
+had the privilege of referring to the speeches and examining
+them, and it belonged to the majority, not to
+the Council; <q>how it was formed, we know.</q> As a
+tribunal the Council was bound to institute a calm and
+searching investigation of facts, tradition and testimonies,
+and for this only one means was available,
+which was employed at the former great Councils including
+the Tridentine, to form deputations from both
+parties for earnest conference, where scientific examination
+might take the place of rhetorical harangues&mdash;from
+both parties, for it was idle with Bilio to bid them
+ignore the existence of two parties. <q>Modo in hôc
+Concilio fit aliter et illud ineptissime,</q> he concluded,
+<pb n='724'/><anchor id='Pg724'/>
+and he proposed the formula, <q>Magisterium universalis
+Ecclesiæ est infallibile.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next speech, of Vitelleschi, who is Archbishop
+of Osimo but has never been in his diocese, though it
+is so near, left no impression; it was an exhortation to
+vote infallibility unanimously. And then followed
+Archbishop Conolly of Halifax with a speech such as
+has seldom been heard here. <q>Thrice,</q> he said, <q>have
+I asked for proof from Scripture according to its
+authentic interpretation, from Tradition and from
+Councils, that the Bishops of the Catholic Church ought
+to be excluded from the definition of dogmas; but my
+request has not been complied with, and now I adjure
+you, like the blind man on the way to Jericho, to give
+us sight that we may believe. Hitherto we have recognised
+the strongest motive for the credibility of
+Catholic doctrine in the general consent of the Church
+notified through the collective episcopate; this has been
+our shield against all external assailants, and by this
+powerful magnet we have drawn hundreds of thousands
+into the Church. Is this our invincible weapon of
+attack and defence now to be broken and trampled
+under foot, and the thousand-headed episcopate with the
+millions of faithful at its back to shrink into the
+<pb n='725'/><anchor id='Pg725'/>
+voice and witness of a single man? Let the Deputation
+prove to us that it has really been always the
+belief of the Church that the Pope is everything and
+the Bishops nothing. The Council of Jerusalem did
+not adopt the formula of Peter but of John, who spoke
+before him, and in the Apostles' Creed we do not say
+<q>Credo in Petrum et successores ejus,</q> but <q>Credo in
+unam Ecclesiam Catholicam.</q> We Bishops have no
+right to renounce for ourselves and our successors the
+hereditary and original rights of the episcopate, to renounce
+the promise of Christ, <q>I am with you to the
+end of the world.</q> But now they want to reduce us to
+nullities, to tear the noblest jewel from our pontifical
+breastplate, to deprive us of the highest prerogative of
+our office, and to transform the whole Church and the
+Bishops with it into a rabble of blind men, among
+whom is one alone who sees, so that they must shut
+their eyes and believe whatever he tells them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was it confidence of victory that moved the Legates
+to allow the bold and free-minded American, who
+spoke with the full weight of a deep and laboriously
+attained conviction, to bring these earnest words to a
+close without interruption, after they had recently reduced
+three of their own speakers in succession to
+<pb n='726'/><anchor id='Pg726'/>
+silence? I know not. It was the unenviable lot of
+the Archbishop of Granada, Monzon y Martins Benvenuto,
+to follow Conolly. No one expects at this
+Council ideas or facts from a Spaniard, but merely bombast
+and abject protestations of homage. Since they no
+longer have Queen Isabella and the throne has been
+vacant, these prelates have transferred their undivided
+devotion to the Pope, and among the reptiles here they
+are the most cringing after the Neapolitans. Monzon
+said he thirsted for new dogmas, and the infallibility
+of the Pope did not satisfy him; he earnestly desired a
+second dogma, viz., the divine and inviolable nature of
+the States of the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was reported two days ago that Cardinal Morichini,
+who formerly as nuncio breathed some German air,
+intends to speak in Guidi's sense, but since the scene
+between the Pope and Guidi has become known, it is
+generally thought that no Cardinal will be so foolhardy
+as to express any other opinion in Council than that of
+the inspired Pope. Meanwhile there are new speakers
+enrolled, among whom are Haynald, Strossmayer, the
+Bishops of Dijon, Constantine, Tarentaise, etc. The
+number considerably exceeds a hundred, but Errington
+has only too much reason for saying the debates are like
+<pb n='727'/><anchor id='Pg727'/>
+a boy riding a rocking-horse&mdash;movement without
+advance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You may imagine what capital the Jesuits make out
+of the speech of the Dominican Guidi. They are the
+supreme and thoroughly devoted body-guard of the
+Roman See, and can alone be implicitly trusted. And
+in fact nobody thinks it possible that a Jesuit should
+speak in Council like Guidi, as neither does any one
+here credit a Jesuit with sincere conviction of what he
+says; it is always known beforehand what he will say
+on any question, viz., what the Order considers for its
+interest and imposes as a corporate doctrine on its individual
+members. The sons of Ignatius remember now
+that the Dominicans have never been trustworthy. As
+early as 1303 the French appeal from Pope Boniface <hi rend='smallcaps'>viii.</hi>
+to a General Council was supported by 130 Dominicans
+at Paris, and at the Councils of Constance and
+Basle they took the most active part in the measures
+against papal omnipotence and in framing the mischievous
+canons of the fourth and fifth sessions of Constance;
+they joined Savonarola in opposing Alexander
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi> and preferred being burned to submitting. And
+again they gave powerful aid in France to the establishment
+of the Gallican doctrine. And what, say the
+<pb n='728'/><anchor id='Pg728'/>
+Jesuits, is the great Church history of the Dominican
+Natalis Alexander but an arsenal from which to this
+day the opponents of infallibility get their weapons?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Preparations are already being made for the festivities
+which are to accompany the promulgation of the new
+dogma. The Romans&mdash;the native population&mdash;cannot
+understand why a part of the Bishops resist it so
+stoutly, and no less mysterious to them is the fiery zeal
+of foreigners, especially Frenchmen, in its favour. Their
+view is that infallibility, as being likely to bring large
+sums of money into Rome, is certainly a profitable and
+praiseworthy affair, and they are accordingly ready for
+noisy demonstrations of joy. Plenty of sky-rockets
+will go up, there will be illuminations, the pillars of
+the churches will be clothed in red damask according
+to the local usage, and numberless wax-candles will be
+burnt. Some enthusiasts think the fountain of Trevi
+will that day flow with wine instead of water, and it is
+hoped that at nightfall a transparency of the famous
+picture painted by the Pope's command to represent
+his infallibility will be shown to the faithful people.
+And next time the French Veuillotists choose to cry
+in the streets <q>Long live the infallible Pope!</q> some
+Romans will join the cry.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='729'/><anchor id='Pg729'/>
+
+<p>
+The festivities will absorb large sums of money, and
+the financiers are not without anxiety; for however
+lucrative the new dogma may prove by and bye, for the
+moment it is an unproductive capital, and the annual
+deficit of thirty million franks cannot be covered by
+promises of future prosperity. It has now been determined,
+since the huge bankruptcy of Langrand-Dumonceaux,
+who had been named a Roman Count, has
+created some alarm, to take in the Rhenish and Westphalian
+nobility with the ecclesiastical unions there as
+sureties, and thus to negotiate a loan of twenty million
+franks <q>al pari.</q> The noble presidents of the unions
+are said to have already signified their willingness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rewards of those for whom there are no Cardinal's
+hats are already under consideration. It is said that
+about a hundred Bishops will be named <q>assistants at
+the Pontifical Throne</q> in recognition of their services.
+Others will be made <q>protonotarii apostolici,</q> most
+of them only <q>protonotarii sopranumerarii non participanti.</q>
+Several priests especially zealous for the good
+cause will be made titular Bishops, and others <q>prelati
+domestici</q> and <q>monsignori,</q> or <q>camerieri segreti,</q> etc.
+Then there are the distinctions by means of colours,
+and soon we shall be able to measure a man's zeal for
+<pb n='730'/><anchor id='Pg730'/>
+the new dogma at the first glance by seeing whether he
+wears the <q>abito paonazzo</q> or violet or scarlet.
+And there are exceptional decorations for use in church
+kept in reserve, like what the Archbishop of Algiers
+had given him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The attitude of Ketteler creates astonishment and is
+studied as a riddle to which no solution can be found.
+The Pope said to-day, <q>Io non capisco, cosa vuole quel
+Ketteler, che un giorno distribuisce delle brochure contro
+di me e contro della mia infallibilità, e che il giorno
+dopo scrive nei giornali che sia pieno di devozione per
+me, e che crede alla mia infallibilità, pare che sia proprio
+mezzo,</q> and thereupon he made a gesture indicating
+that the Bishop of Mayence was not quite right in
+his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In fact Ketteler is the only man here who perplexes
+a reporter or historian. He has a work printed and distributed,
+in which infallibility is declared to be an unscriptural
+and unecclesiastical doctrine, and he says in
+his attack on me that according to his view Scripture
+and Tradition (<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the two only sources for the
+Church's faith) do not justify its dogmatic definition.
+Yet he affirms that he was always an infallibilist
+believer and will soon be more so than ever. It is
+<pb n='731'/><anchor id='Pg731'/>
+difficult to report on the performances of a theological
+gymnast who seems rather to balance himself in mid
+air than to have firm ground under his feet. Here it is
+thought that he follows the counsel of his powerful
+patrons in the German College and the Gesù, who have
+made him understand that the new dogma will certainly
+be proclaimed, and that he would do well to
+change as speedily as he can from an inopportunist to
+a zealous advocate and executor of the decree. He has
+lately been reproached by an influential theologian
+(Gass) with making his own Church worse than it is by
+his doctrine that the Catholic Church knows of no duty
+of obedience against conscience. It will certainly never
+occur to me, now or at any future time, to have recourse
+to the conscience of Bishop Ketteler; that would indeed
+be the last refuge one would fly to!
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='732'/><anchor id='Pg732'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixty-Second Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, June 30, 1870.</hi>&mdash;In the middle ages ecclesiastical
+controversies were decided by the ordeal of the
+cross. The representatives of both parties placed themselves
+before a large cross, with their arms stretched
+out in the form of a cross, and he whose arms first
+sank, or who fell exhausted to the ground, was conquered.
+The heat and the Roman fever have replaced
+this ordeal at the Council. The process which is to
+test the result has been going on for six weeks, and the
+majority will evidently come out of it with flying colours.
+It is composed chiefly of Italians and Spaniards
+of both hemispheres, who can bear such things much
+better than northerners, and as it is four times as numerous
+as the minority, gaps made in its ranks by sickness
+and death are soon filled up, and the phalanx remains
+firmly closed, while the Opposition receives the news of the
+sickness or departure of one of its members as heralding
+<pb n='733'/><anchor id='Pg733'/>
+its growing discouragement and final defeat. How well
+the authorities understand the inestimable value of
+this new ally, the heat and mephitic exhalations, is
+shown by the laconic but significant words of the
+papal journalist, Veuillot, in his 125th Letter on the
+Council, <q>Et si la définition ne peut mûrir qu'au soleil,
+eh bien, on grillera.</q> As before, so now again Roman
+orthodoxy seems to have called fire to its aid, and for
+Bishops, who do not wish to be roasted according to
+Veuillot's wish, flight is the only alternative.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cardinal Guidi has received the most peremptory
+orders from the Pope to make a formal retractation of his
+speech in Council. The form and occasion of making
+it he may arrange with the Legates. He has already
+had an interview with Bilio. The Pope has forbidden
+him to receive visits, that he may be free to consider
+without distraction the greatness of his error. Solitary
+confinement is adopted in the penal legislation of other
+countries too as an efficient instrument of reformation.
+Guidi has told the Presidents that he is ready to
+give an explanation of his speech in a public sitting, if
+they will announce beforehand that he does so by the
+Pope's desire; but he can make no retractation. Jandel,
+the Dominican General, intends now to deliver a speech
+<pb n='734'/><anchor id='Pg734'/>
+in refutation of Guidi's theory, which has been composed
+for him in the Gesù. Many think that Guidi will be
+deterred from letting things come to extremities by the
+terrible example of Cardinal Andrea, who was worried
+to death. A Cardinal, who lives out of the Roman
+States, may maintain a certain independence or even
+opposition, as the precedent of Cardinal Noailles shows,
+but in Rome this is impossible. As Archbishop of
+Bologna Guidi would be under the protection of the
+Italian Government, but thither he will never be allowed
+to return.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Heat, fever and intrigues&mdash;this is a brief description
+of the state of Rome, as regards the Council. The heat
+and pestilential miasmas are unendurable for foreigners
+from the north; already six French and four American
+Bishops have been obliged to save their lives by departure,
+and of those who stay in Rome a third are unable
+from their bodily ailments to attend the sittings. A
+Petition to the Pope is now in course of signature
+praying for a prorogation, on account of the danger
+to the lives of many foreign and aged prelates at this
+season of the year. I give you the text, but will
+observe that I hear most refuse to sign, some thinking
+the case a hopeless one, others of very ill repute in the
+<pb n='735'/><anchor id='Pg735'/>
+Vatican fearing their adherence would only make it
+more so. The Petition runs thus&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Beatissime Pater! Episcopi infrascripti, tam proprio
+quam aliorum permultorum Patrum nomine a
+benignitate S. V. reverenter, fiducialiter et enixe expostulant,
+ut ea, quæ sequuntur, paterne dignetur
+excipere:</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Ad Patres in Concilio Lateranensi v. sedentes hoc
+habebat, die <hi rend='smallcaps'>xvii.</hi> Junii, Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi> Papa <q>Quia jam temporis
+dispositione ... concedimus</q> simulque Concilium
+Pontifex ad tempus autumnale prorogabat.&mdash;Pejor certe
+inpræsentiarum conditio nostra est. Calor æstivus, jam
+desinente mense Junio, nimius est, et de die in diem
+intolerabilior crescit; unde RR. Patrum, inter quos tot
+seniores sunt, annorum pondere pressi, et laboribus confecti,
+valetudo graviter periclitatur.&mdash;Timentur inprimis
+febres, quibus magis obnoxii sunt extranei hujusce
+temperiei regionis non assuefacti.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Quidquid vero tentaverit et feliciter perfecerit
+liberalitas S. V., ut non paucis episcopis hospitia bona
+præberentur, plerique tamen relegati sunt in habitationes
+nimis augustas, sine aëre, calidissimas omninoque insalubres.
+Unde jam plures episcopi ob infirmitatem
+corporis abire coacti sunt, multi etiam Romæ infirmantur
+<pb n='736'/><anchor id='Pg736'/>
+et Concilio adesse nequeunt, ut patet ex tot sedibus
+quæ in aulâ conciliari vacuæ apparent.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Antequam igitur magis ac magis creverit ægrotorum
+numerus, quorum plures periculo hic occumbendi exponerentur,
+instantissime postulamus, B. Pater, ut S. V.
+aliquam Concilii suspensionem, quæ post festum S.
+Petri convenienter inciperet, concedere dignetur.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Etenim, B. Pater, cum centum et viginti episcopi
+nomen suum dederint, ut in tanti momenti quæstione
+audiantur, evidens est, discussionem non posse intra
+paucos dies præcipitari, nisi magno rerum ac pacis
+religiosæ dispendio. Multo magis congruum esset
+atque necessarium brevem aliquam, ob ingruentes gravissimos
+æstatis calores, Concilio suspensionem dari.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Nova vero Synodi periodus ad primam diem mensis
+Octobris forsitan indicari posset.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>S. V., si hoc, ut fidenter speramus, concesserit,
+gratissimos sensus nobis populisque nostris excitabit,
+utpote quæ gravissimæ omnium necessitati consuluerit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Pedes S. V. devote osculantes nosmet dicimus S. V.
+humillimos et obsequentissimos famulos in Christo
+filios.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Attempts have already been made by word of mouth
+to secure some compassion from the Pope for the severe
+<pb n='737'/><anchor id='Pg737'/>
+sufferings of the Bishops, but wholly in vain. His
+comments on the members of the minority, if rightly
+reported here, are so irritable and bitter that I scruple
+to mention them. But I must relate what occurred
+to-day at a farewell audience given to some Maltese
+Knights, who had come to exercise their privilege of
+keeping guard at an Œcumenical Council. The Pope
+first turned to an English member of the Order and
+wished him success in the scheme for introducing it
+into England, and then expressed his sympathy for
+that nation in his confident expectation of the speedy
+and innumerable conversions promised by Manning,
+adding the remark that the Italians were somewhat
+volatile. And the mildness of the expression, compared
+with former ebullitions of anger, proved that the
+infallibilist line of the Italian Bishops had covered in
+his eyes the political sins of the nation. But then he
+turned to the Germans, who were present in the greatest
+number, with the words, <q>I piu cattivi sono i Tedeschi,
+sono i piu cattivi di tutti, lo spirito Tedesco a guastato
+tutto.</q> Even that was not enough, but a Bohemian
+knight who was present had to listen to a stream of invectives
+against the conduct of Cardinal Schwarzenberg,
+which made a very unpleasant impression on him.
+<pb n='738'/><anchor id='Pg738'/>
+As a French Bishop said to me to-day, it is a humiliating
+spectacle to see a man who, at the very moment
+when he is assimilating his office to the Godhead,
+recklessly displays the little weaknesses and passions
+which people are generally ashamed to expose to view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was clearly shown in the Congregations of 23d
+and 25th June that the majority only continue to
+tolerate the speeches of the Opposition as an almost
+unendurable nuisance. Loud murmurs alternated with
+the ringing of the Presidents' bell. When Bishop
+Losanna of Biella, the senior of the Council, was speaking
+against burdening the Christian world with the new
+dogma, the Legate tried to ring him down. He entreated
+that at least out of regard for his advanced age
+they would let him finish the little he still had to say.
+In vain. The Legate went on ringing and the Bishop
+speaking, so that the assembly for some time was
+regaled with a duet between a bell and an&mdash;of course
+inaudible&mdash;human voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the Congregation of the 23d Bishop Landriot of
+Rheims made a long speech in the interests of mediation
+and mutual concessions, which showed careful
+study, but was received with every sign of displeasure
+by the majority: he also proposed what Errington had
+<pb n='739'/><anchor id='Pg739'/>
+wanted, that a Commission formed from both parties
+should examine the whole tradition on the subject and
+report the result to the Council. At this cries of <q>Oho,
+oho!</q> rose from the majority. Discouraged and intimidated
+the Archbishop concluded with the declaration
+that, if the Pope pleased to confirm the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, he
+submitted by anticipation, at which the faces which had
+grown black brightened up again and the apology for
+the French Church which he ended with was condoned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The most remarkable speeches in the sitting of 25th
+June were those of the Bishop Legate of Trieste and
+Ketteler of Mayence. The first had the courage to say
+plainly that the manipulation of Scripture texts, which
+were pressed into the service of the new dogma in
+glaring contradiction to the authentic interpretation of
+the Church, was a sin. Ketteler's speech created the
+greatest sensation from its decided tone, and its not
+betraying the contradiction in which he seems to find
+himself involved after his public declarations in Germany.
+I must indeed reckon on my report again
+displeasing and angering him, for this <q>mobile ingegno
+usato ad amar e a disamar in un punto</q> is wont to
+take it very ill if his bold transitions do not leave the
+same impression on others which floats before his own
+<pb n='740'/><anchor id='Pg740'/>
+memory. But I will fulfil my duty as historian of the
+Council in spite of this. Ketteler urged that nobody
+had alleged any clear evidence for a personal and
+separate infallibility of the Pope being really contained
+in Scripture, Tradition and the consciousness of all
+Churches; it was only the opinion of a certain school&mdash;<q>placita
+cujusdam scholæ</q> he repeated several times
+emphatically. The Pope certainly had the right of
+proscribing doctrines which contradicted the dogmas
+already decided by the Church, but by no means the
+totally different right of formulating a new dogma without
+the consent of the episcopate. It was the greatest
+absurdity to believe or say <q>Pontificem in pectoris sui
+scrinio omnem traditionem repositam et infusam habere.</q>
+At these words murmurs arose in the assembly;
+all had shortly before heard and repeated to one another
+the Pope's assertion, <q>La tradizione son' io.</q> Then
+Ketteler attacked the theory of Cardinal Cajetan, the
+well-known first opponent of Luther, that Peter alone
+among the Apostles had a <q>potestas ordinaria</q> to
+be transmitted to his successors, while the <q>potestas
+specialis</q> conferred by Christ on the rest expired at
+their death, so that the Bishops are not successors of
+the Apostles but derive all their authority from the
+<pb n='741'/><anchor id='Pg741'/>
+Pope. This mischievous system had been adopted by a
+certain school, and the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> before them was drawn up
+in accordance with it and in contradiction to all Catholic
+tradition. It placed the Bishops in the same relation
+to the Pope as priests occupied towards Bishops, which
+was unheard of. He protested against the whole system,
+and desired that in every dogmatic decree Holy
+Scripture and Tradition should be taken full account
+of: the Pope needed the co-operation of the Bishops as
+representatives of tradition. It was utterly wrong to
+believe that the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>depositum fidei</foreign> was committed to the
+Pope alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If the force and clearness of Ketteler's speech evoked
+deep and serious reflection, an amusing episode occurred
+at the close of the sitting. The Irish Bishop Keane of
+Cloyne ascended the tribune. There is a story told of
+a German city whose sapient councillors carried the sunlight
+out of the street in sacks to light their town-hall,
+which had no windows; and so Keane informed his
+hearers that St. Peter brought the whole body of tradition
+with him to Rome well stored up; here and here
+alone it was still kept, and every Pope took what was
+required from the stock which he possessed as a whole
+genuine and entire.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='742'/><anchor id='Pg742'/>
+
+<p>
+Those who wish to prosecute psychological and
+ethical studies should come to Rome. Here they may
+observe how the three great powers of the world, as St.
+Augustine calls them, <q>Errores, amores, terrores,</q> work
+together in full harmony and activity; the last especially
+will aid the victory of the first&mdash;for how long
+He only knows who rules the destiny of man.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='743'/><anchor id='Pg743'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixty-Third Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, July 2, 1870.</hi>&mdash;The Pope's reported answer
+to those who spoke to him of the sufferings of the
+Bishops and their danger of death, and the consequent
+need for proroguing the Council, is passing from mouth
+to mouth. I should consider it a sin to publish it.
+Were it true, one would have to treat the man who
+could so speak as the Orsini treated Boniface viii. in
+his last days. If it is not true, it is very remarkable
+that the Romans have no hesitation in circulating it
+and really credit their Pope with it. This and the
+disdain bordering on simple contempt with which the
+Romans look down on the Bishops are among the
+indelible impressions they will take back with them
+over the Alps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the sitting of 28th June Bishop Vitali of Ferentino
+in the Roman States first inveighed against the long
+speeches of the Bishops, and then broke into a dithyrambic
+<pb n='744'/><anchor id='Pg744'/>
+panegyric on his master, the Pope, who, like
+the Emperor Titus, was the <q>deliciæ orbis terrarum.</q>
+He was somewhat abruptly interrupted by the Legates
+in the middle of his rhapsody. Ginoulhiac, Archbishop
+of Lyons, who is the most learned member of the French
+episcopate after Maret, next delivered an ably and
+carefully composed speech, which was not interrupted.
+He appealed to the words and example of former
+Popes who had acknowledged&mdash;like <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, Celestine <hi rend='smallcaps'>i.</hi> in
+430&mdash;that they were not masters of the faith but only
+guardians of the traditional doctrine, and that not singly
+but in unison with all Churches and their Bishops, as
+was clearly expressed in the decree. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi>, strong
+as was the pressure put upon him by France, delayed a
+long time the issue of the decree against the civil Constitution
+of the clergy of 1790, because, as he wrote to
+the King, the Pope must first conscientiously ascertain
+how the faithful will receive his decision. But a large
+section of Catholics were not at all disposed to receive
+this <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, and the decree would evidently evoke the
+bitterest hostility to the Church where it did not already
+exist, and immensely increase it where it did. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>vi.</hi>
+then said that, if the Roman See, the centre of the
+Church, lost its authority through exaggerating its claims,
+<pb n='745'/><anchor id='Pg745'/>
+all was lost. Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi> should take care that this doctrine
+did not become a snare to innumerable Catholics. He
+concluded by commending the formula of St. Antoninus,
+which requires the consent of the episcopate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the sitting of 30th June a member of the almost
+extinct third party among the French, Sergent, Bishop
+of Quimper or Cornouailles, came forward. He proposed
+adding to the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, which might then be
+accepted, words requiring the co-operation for decisions
+on faith of the <q>episcopi, sive dispersi sive in Concilio
+congregati.</q> But he insisted on the superiority of the
+Pope to a Council according to the decree of Leo. <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi>,&mdash;or,
+as he said, the fifth Lateran Council, and defended the
+order of business imposed on this Council by Pius <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix.</hi>
+But here he touched on a very sore place; the Bishops
+sit here under the continual conviction of having their
+hands tied in an illegitimate and tyrannical fashion, and
+knowing that the order of business is in direct contradiction
+to the independence of the ancient Councils.
+The Legates must have felt that the Opposition would
+say, <q>Hæc excusatio est accusatio,</q> and that it would
+give the requisite handle for again renewing their written
+protests by word of mouth now at the decisive moment.
+Sergent was therefore called to order.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='746'/><anchor id='Pg746'/>
+
+<p>
+After the Bishop of Aversa, who spoke as an ordinary
+infallibilist, Bishop Martin of Paderborn came forward
+and created a sensation. A German infallibilist, like
+Martin, who was not kneaded and dressed in the Jesuit
+school, is an interesting and curious phenomenon of itself,
+and produces somewhat the same impression as an
+European who voluntarily lives among savages and
+adopts their language and customs. But Bishop Martin's
+appearance was remarkable on other grounds also.
+It was long since any one had been heard in the
+Council who spoke in so angry a tone and with such
+noise and visible endeavour to supplement his stammering
+utterance by the action of hands and feet. It was
+a difficult labour that Martin achieved, like a singer
+drowning his own voice, and doubly meritorious in these
+melting days. And here I may make a remark that
+should have been made before: the Hall has really
+gained lately in acoustic qualities, from having an awning
+stretched over it which acts as a sounding-board.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Martin shouted into the Hall that the personal infallibility
+of every Pope was inseparable from the primacy,
+for the Pope was the supreme legislator, and therefore
+he must of necessity be divinely preserved from all error.
+The Bishops of the minority were amazed at this statement,
+for none of them had expected a German Bishop
+<pb n='747'/><anchor id='Pg747'/>
+to declare the whole code of the Inquisition, as promulgated
+by the Popes from Innocent <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> to Paul <hi rend='smallcaps'>v.</hi>, infallible
+and inspired. But there was still better behind.
+Two German witnesses for infallibility were cited, Dr.
+Luther, on account of his letter to the Pope in 1518,
+and Dr. Pichler of 1870. Up to 1763 all Germans
+were stanch infallibilists, but then Febronianism came
+in and for a time obscured this light of pure doctrine,
+which had previously shone so bright in Catholic
+Germany. But an orthodox reaction had followed,
+thanks to the excellent catechism of the Jesuit Deharbe,
+the Provincial Synod of Cologne and several Pastorals.
+Martin then referred to Döllinger, and reproached him
+with having in his earlier works&mdash;which were not named&mdash;taught
+papal infallibility, whereas he now assailed it.
+The Bishop, who is a member of the Deputation, then
+proposed a formula he had devised, <q>Traditioni inhærentes
+docemus Pontificem, cum universalem Ecclesiam
+docet, vi divinæ assistentiæ errare non posse.</q> But
+that was not enough, without smiting down the opponents
+of the doctrine by a solemn anathema, as follows,
+<q>Si quis dixerit non nisi accedente consensu Episcoporum
+Romanum Pontificem errare non posse, anathema
+sit.</q> He moreover agreed with Spalding and Dechamps
+that parish priests and others having cure of souls
+<pb n='748'/><anchor id='Pg748'/>
+should be required by a special admonition addressed
+to them to impress this doctrine of infallibility on their
+people often and emphatically from the pulpit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The speech was delivered in the tone and manner of
+a confessor dealing with a hardened sinner in his last
+moments, and the Germans, from whose ranks the speaker
+had issued,&mdash;men like Rauscher, Haynald, Strossmayer,
+Hefele&mdash;sat shamefaced with their eyes on the ground,
+while the delight of the Italians and Spaniards could
+be read on their countenances at this humiliation of
+the nation which prides itself on the superior culture
+of its clergy. But they were surprised at Martin's
+concluding declaration that no doubt in Germany great
+dangers for the Church would follow from the promulgation
+of the doctrine. It was mentioned in the Council
+Hall that, in a widely circulated school-book which
+had passed through eleven or twelve editions, Martin
+had taught the exact reverse of the doctrine he now so
+noisily and peremptorily maintained; but then it was
+observed in excuse for him that the heterodoxies of this
+book, though it bore his name, were no fault of his, as
+he had simply transcribed it from the papers of the late
+Professor Diekhoff, which were left in his charge.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='749'/><anchor id='Pg749'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<anchor id='Letter_LXIV'/>
+<head>Sixty-Fourth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, July 5, 1870.</hi>&mdash;Rome is an excellent school
+for Bishops; a course of seven months at the Council
+produces wonderful results. One illusion after another
+is laid aside and an insight gained into the working of
+the huge machine and the forces that put it in motion,
+and the Bishops learn at last, though it be laboriously
+and not without tears, why they were summoned and
+what services alone are demanded of them. The historian
+Pachymeres relates that, when the people of Constantinople
+demanded a Council in 1282 in order to
+judge the unionist Patriarch, Bekkus, Bishop Theoktistus
+of Adrianople said that they treated Bishops like
+wooden spits on which Bekkus might be roasted, and
+which might then be thrown into the fire.<note place='foot'><hi rend='italic'>Pachym.</hi> II. 20, ed. Bonn.</note> A very
+similar feeling has come over many Bishops here;
+they know that if they say <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign> at last, they will
+be cast into the fire, after they have helped by their
+<pb n='750'/><anchor id='Pg750'/>
+reluctant practical recognition of both the first and
+second order of business&mdash;destructive as both are to all
+real freedom&mdash;to forge the new spiritual yoke. And
+then they find their schoolroom a very narrow and
+uncomfortable one, and have at last discovered that
+it looks very like a prison cell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is but a game of moves and counter-moves as on a
+chessboard, only that no one dares to incur the penalty
+of high treason by saying <q>Check to the king,</q> or lifting
+a finger for such an audacious move. The minority
+were so confounded and irritated by the abrupt closing
+of the general debate, because they hoped to prolong it
+till prorogation became inevitable. For nobody doubted
+in April and May that this would follow at the end of
+June, and the notion was sedulously fostered by the
+official staff of the Council&mdash;the Legates and Secretary
+Fessler&mdash;and by the Pope himself. It is not long since
+Pius said to a French Bishop, <q>It would be barbarity
+on my part to want to keep the Bishops here in July.</q>
+And thus the Opposition, whenever they were shaken
+and disturbed by some violent act, let matters be
+hushed up and never gave any practical effect to their
+protests and complaints. But now the Court party say
+that it would indeed be tyrannical cruelty to keep us
+<pb n='751'/><anchor id='Pg751'/>
+here, under ordinary circumstances, imprisoned in this
+furnace full of fevers, but it is justified by the abnormal
+situation. The grand and saving act of the infallibilist
+definition, which is to quicken the whole Church with
+new powers of life and introduce the golden age of
+absolute ecclesiastical dominion, cannot any longer be
+held in suspense. <q>You surely will not wish,</q> said
+Cardinal de Angelis to a Bishop who was urging the
+necessity of a prorogation, <q>that the Pope, after spending
+so many thousand scudi on the Bishops, should
+now be left alone in the Vatican without any recompense.</q>
+And Antonelli thinks the Bishops have only
+themselves to blame for their present suffering condition;
+why have they wasted so much time in speeches?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since that shocking saying of the Pope's, which I
+referred to in my last letter, has became known here,
+the Bishops have abandoned as hopeless the design of
+making a direct appeal to him for the prorogation of
+the Council on the score of the health and lives of
+its members. And this conviction has been further
+strengthened by the insolence of the Court theologian,
+Louis Veuillot. <q>Let yourselves be roasted, since it is
+only through this fiery ordeal that the precious wine
+of infallibility can be matured,</q> he exclaims to them,
+<pb n='752'/><anchor id='Pg752'/>
+and they know now that they are inside a door over
+which the inscription is written
+</p>
+
+<quote rend='display'>
+<lg>
+<l><q>Lasciate ogni speranza voi ch' intrate.</q></l>
+</lg>
+</quote>
+
+<p>
+And now there is a new cause of alarm. It is said&mdash;perhaps
+the report is spread on purpose&mdash;that at last
+no Bishop will be allowed to depart till he has signed a
+bond laid before him declaring his entire and unconditional
+submission. We actually hear that, by a recent
+decision, leave of absence is only to be given to the
+Bishops in case of serious illness, that is, when they are
+no longer equal to the journey. Several prelates therefore
+have already inquired of the ambassadors of their
+Governments, what means of protection they could
+afford them in case of such violence being exercised.
+The ambassadors will be obliged to write home for
+further instructions, as it seems no such case had been
+foreseen as possible to occur. But so many astonishing
+and seemingly impossible things have happened
+during the last seven months that such an act would
+no longer excite even any particular surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guidi still appears in Council and shows himself in
+his votes an independent thinker and by no means a
+humiliated or broken man, but in his convent he is
+guarded like a prisoner and constantly urged by threats
+<pb n='753'/><anchor id='Pg753'/>
+and persuasions to recant. When a remark was made
+to the Pope about his harsh treatment of this man, who
+still as Cardinal shares the numerous privileges of his
+order, he is reported to have said, <q>I summoned him,
+not as Cardinal, but as brother Guidi, whom I lifted
+out of the dust.</q> Guidi had drawn great displeasure
+on himself before by joining Cardinals Corsi and Riario
+Sforza in making representations to the Pope against the
+alteration introduced by his order in the sequence of the
+subjects for discussion, by which means the infallibilist
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> was interpolated before its time. He lived in
+the Minerva with certain Bishops of his Order, Milella,
+Pastero, Alcazar and Manucillo, and their mutual conferences
+led to the matured conviction that the personal
+infallibility of the Pope is a novel doctrine, of late
+invention and unknown even to the great Thomas
+and the Thomist school, chiefly introduced in substance
+by the Jesuits. Guidi appeals to the fact that years
+ago he has taught this at Vienna, as was or easily
+might have been known. If he keeps firm, and Cardinal
+Silvestri, who often votes with the Opposition,
+joins their side in good earnest&mdash;five dissentient Cardinals,
+including Mathieu, Rauscher and Schwarzenberg&mdash;more
+Italian Bishops than the Court would like, may
+<pb n='754'/><anchor id='Pg754'/>
+say <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>. It is already remarked that they
+earnestly inquire among themselves whether the German
+and French minority are likely to remain firm at
+the decisive moment and not melt away, in which case
+they would be ready to vote with them. You may
+imagine how intensely Guidi is hated here. For the
+moment he might make O'Connell's boast his own when
+he said he was <q>the best abused man in the British
+Empire.</q> What Persius said is equally true of the
+clerical <q>turba Remi</q> now,&mdash;<q>sequitur fortunam ut
+semper, et odit damnatos.</q> I may mention in illustration
+of the view prevalent among the majority, that
+Manning the other day told one of the most illustrious
+Bishops of the minority he had no further business in
+the Catholic Church and had better leave it. Even in
+the Council Hall Bishop Gastaldi of Saluzzo exclaimed
+to the minority that they were already blotted out of
+the book of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The internal history of the minority since the end of
+June consists mainly of their endeavours to avert the
+departure of the timid and home-sick and those attacked
+by fever. Hitherto leave has been given them readily
+enough when asked, but it is said this will not be so
+for the future. The Prince Bishop of Breslau, Förster,
+<pb n='755'/><anchor id='Pg755'/>
+was urgently entreated to remain, and he seemed to be
+persuaded, but now he is gone,<note place='foot'>According to a letter of his which reached Breslau the 12th July, permission
+to depart has been refused him.</note> and so are Purcell of
+Cincinnati, Vancsa, Archbishop of Fogaras, Greith of
+St. Gall, and others&mdash;a serious loss under present circumstances.
+The feeling of self-preservation at last
+overpowers every other; and what answer can be given
+to a man who says, when required to stay and help to
+save the truth, <q>If I am ill in bed with fever on the
+critical day, my vote is lost</q>? Moreover the burning
+atmosphere peculiar to Rome, impregnated with exhalations
+from the Pontine marshes, oppresses and enervates
+mind as well as body and cripples the energy of the
+will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So on the 1st July an understanding was arrived at
+among the Opposition Bishops. It was felt more and
+more clearly that to go on with the speeches was a
+sterile and dreary business. For one solid and thoughtful
+speech from, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, Darboy, Strossmayer, Haynald,
+Guidi, Dupanloup, Ginoulhiac, Ketteler or Maret, one
+had to listen for long hours to the effusions of Spanish,
+Sicilian and Calabrian infallibilists, and the speeches
+of this party sound as if their authors had first studied
+<pb n='756'/><anchor id='Pg756'/>
+the dedicatory epistles to the Popes which the Jesuits
+prefix to their works, and strung together the sonorous
+phrases contained in them. Moreover the conduct of
+the Legates had become palpable partisanship. For
+several days they offered demonstrative thanks to every
+speaker who gave up his turn; the bitterest attacks
+of the majority on their opponents passed unrebuked,
+and the murmurs and signs of impatience whenever
+infallibility was called in question grew more and more
+pronounced. It became evident that there was nothing
+really to be gained by prolonging the speeches, when
+all hope of getting the Council prorogued had to be
+abandoned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sitting of July 2 the affair was to have been
+brought to a settlement. The minority had sketched
+out a notice in the Council Hall, stating that all
+speakers on their side withdrew, and handed it to
+Cardinal Mathieu to communicate to the French, but
+they declined to accept it, saying every one should be
+free to decide for himself. And so, on that day, out of
+twenty-two Fathers only four spoke, including Meignan
+of Chalons and Ramadie of Perpignan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it soon became irresistibly evident to both
+parties that it was advisable for them to put an end to
+<pb n='757'/><anchor id='Pg757'/>
+the oratorical exercises. The Legates had frequently
+used the formula of the Index when a speaker gave up
+his turn, saying, <q>laudabiliter orationi renunciavit,</q> or
+<q>magnas ipsi agimus gratias.</q> The majority had two
+reasons for wanting the speeches to go on&mdash;first the
+wish of particular individuals to signalize themselves
+and lay up a stock of merits deserving reward; and
+secondly, that the Northern Bishops might succumb to
+the rays of the July sun, as Homer's Achæans sunk
+under the arrows of Apollo. But they were made to
+understand that the Pope would account their simple
+<q><foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>, sans phrase</q> a sufficient service, and reward
+it according to their wish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moreover they felt secure about the eventual attitude
+of the minority, or at least a considerable portion of them,
+for it was known that two German Bishops had said,
+<q>We shall resist to the last moment, but then we shall
+submit, for we don't wish to cause a schism.</q> This
+gave great joy to the Court party. I heard a monsignore
+say, <q>These are our best friends, more so than those
+who already vote for and with us, for their coming over
+at the critical moment can only be ascribed to the
+triumphant and irresistible power of the Holy Ghost
+poured out through the Pope upon the Council; each
+<pb n='758'/><anchor id='Pg758'/>
+of them is a Saul converted into a Paul, who has found
+his Damascus here at Rome, and becomes a living trophy
+of the vice-godship of the Pope and the legitimacy and
+œcumenicity of this Council. We can desire nothing
+better for our cause than these late and sudden conversions.</q>
+And thus at last an understanding satisfactory
+to all parties was come to; on July 4 all the speakers
+enrolled withdrew, only reserving their right of presenting
+their observations in writing to the Deputation.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='759'/><anchor id='Pg759'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<anchor id='Letter_LXV'/>
+<head>Sixty-Fifth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, July 7, 1870.</hi>&mdash;I must go back a few days and
+tell you something more of the speeches made since St.
+Peter's Day. It is for the interest of the contemporary
+world and of posterity that the Roman system of hushing
+up and deathlike silence should not be fully carried
+out, and that it should be known what truths have
+been uttered and what grounds alleged against the fatal
+decision of the majority and rejected by them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon after Bishop Martin a man spoke who had
+gained the highest respect from all quarters, Verot,
+Bishop of Savannah, a really apostolical character, compared
+in America with St. Francis of Sales. On a
+former occasion, on June 15, he had pointedly criticised
+the conduct of the Court party and the attempt to surrender
+all that yet remains of the ancient constitution
+of the Church to a centralized papal absolutism. <q>If,</q>
+he said, <q>the Pope wants to possess and exercise a
+direct and immediate jurisdiction in my diocese, only
+<pb n='760'/><anchor id='Pg760'/>
+let him come over to America himself, and bring with
+him plenty of the priests who are so abundant here to
+my country where there are so few; gladly will I
+attend him servant and observe how he, riding
+about in my huge diocese, judges and arranges everything
+on the spot.</q> And, as some Bishops of the majority
+had given out the favourite Roman watchword, that
+historical facts must yield to the clearness and <foreign rend='italic'>a priori</foreign>
+certainty of doctrine, Verot replied briefly, <q>To me an
+ounce of historical facts outweighs a thousand pounds of
+your theories.</q> This time he was not interrupted, as he
+had always been before,&mdash;by most no doubt not understood.
+Maret too, in the sitting of July 1, attacked the
+projected absolutism which the Church was now to be
+saddled with. In the political world, he said, it is done
+away with and disappears more and more under a
+common feeling of repugnance, and now it is for the
+first time to be confirmed in the Church, and Christians,
+<q>the children of heavenly freedom,</q> are to be reduced,
+after the protection afforded by the consent of the episcopate
+is abolished, to spiritual slavery, and forced into
+blind subjection to the dictates of a single man. He
+said this in more courteous language than this brief
+epitome gives scope for.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='761'/><anchor id='Pg761'/>
+
+<p>
+Among the most important speeches was that which
+followed, of Bishop David of Saint Brieuc in Bretagne.
+It was one of the speeches of a kind I said in an
+early letter would not be tolerated, the result has refuted
+me. The Bishop said that the proposed article of
+faith was first invented in the fifteenth century, when a
+new form, different from that ordained by Christ, was
+given to the Church, at the expense of the inalienable
+rights both of the Bishops and the faithful. If the
+hypothesis of papal infallibility really belonged to the
+deposit of faith, it must have been defined and universally
+acknowledged in the earliest ages, as it would
+evidently be a fundamental doctrine indispensable for
+the whole Church. The parallel drawn between this and
+the lately defined and previously undetermined and open
+doctrine of the Immaculate Conception is quite irrelevant.
+It is clearly evident, he added, that this new attempt to
+exalt the Papacy will produce the same disturbance as
+the earlier one in the sixteenth century. A sign of it
+is the sudden and rapidly growing alienation of the
+French clergy from their Bishops, which is instigated
+from a distance. Passing on to a vindication of the
+much abused Gallican doctrine, he showed that the
+former Popes themselves declared it to be allowable and
+<pb n='762'/><anchor id='Pg762'/>
+only reprobated the attempt to make it into a special
+and separate rule of faith for the French Church alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Spanish Bishop of Cuenca, Payà-y-Rico, followed,
+and began by affirming in the bragging and bombastic
+style of his country, that in Spain the infallibilist doctrine
+had always prevailed. This was a glaring falsehood;
+it would have been enough to cite against him
+the names of Tostado, Escobar, Victoria, and others, the
+Spanish Bishops and theologians at Trent, and the fact
+that the Inquisition first made the doctrine dominant in
+Spain. But immediate replies are not permitted in the
+Council Hall, and the majority were so charmed with his
+disclosures that they loudly applauded him. Encouraged
+by this he turned round upon the Opposition, observing
+that a short interval was still allowed them to come
+over to the majority, and that, unless they made a good
+use of it, their only choice lay between a subsequent
+meritorious submission or condemnation for heresy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The minority, who meet daily either in national or
+international conferences, were engaged in drawing up
+a formula requiring the consent of the episcopate as
+indispensable, but soon gave this up and resolved to
+abstain from any demonstration, as they could gain
+nothing by it. Several thought this would compel the
+<pb n='763'/><anchor id='Pg763'/>
+majority, if they really wanted to gain the concurrence
+of the Opposition, to make proposals on their side for
+some tolerable formula. But at present that is highly
+improbable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the sitting of July 5, where the only business was
+to vote on the third chapter, in consequence of the
+general withdrawal of the speakers, an unexpected
+occurrence intervened. Some days before Bishop Martin
+of Paderborn had proposed in his own name and that
+of some of his colleagues that in a Supplement, designated
+as a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>monitum</foreign>, the doctrinal authority of the
+Bishops should be mentioned, but only incidentally and
+in a sense compatible with the Pope's prerogative of personal
+infallibility. When the Pope heard of this, he was
+much displeased, and peremptorily ordered that a canon
+should be laid before the Council for acceptance enouncing
+emphatically and under anathema the papal omnipotence
+over the whole Church. The Deputation had
+already had the third canon printed and distributed in
+the following amended form:&mdash;<q>Si quis dixerit, Romani
+Pontificis Primatum esse tantum officium inspectionis
+et directionis et supremam ipsius potestatem
+jurisdictionis in universam Ecclesiam non esse plenam,
+sed tantum extraordinariam et mediatam&mdash;anathema
+<pb n='764'/><anchor id='Pg764'/>
+sit.</q> But in order to carry out the Pope's command,
+the Bishop of Rovigo, as a member of the Deputation,
+read the canon in a more stringent form, which in fact
+left the extremest absolutist nothing to desire, but
+which was not in the printed text and was either not
+heard or not understood by the greater part of the
+Bishops, while yet it was to be voted on on the spot&mdash;in
+contradiction to the distinct directions of the order
+of business. This more stringent version of the canon
+runs thus:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Si quis dixerit, Romanum Pontificem habere tantummodo
+officium inspectionis vel directionis, non
+autem plenam et supremam potestatem jurisdictionis
+in universam Ecclesiam, tum in rebus, quæ ad fidem et
+mores, tum quæ ad disciplinam et regimen Ecclesiæ per
+totum orbem diffusæ pertinent; aut eum habere tantum
+potiores partes, non vero totam plenitudinem hujus
+supremæ potestatis; aut hanc ejus potestatem non esse
+ordinariam et immediatam sive in omnes ac singulas
+Ecclesias, sive in omnes et singulos pastores et fideles&mdash;anathema
+sit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A more shameless outwitting of a Council has never
+been attempted. Archbishop Darboy at once rose and
+protested against this juggling manœuvre, and the
+<pb n='765'/><anchor id='Pg765'/>
+Legates were obliged, humiliating as it was for them, to
+let the matter drop for the present; but the addition
+will be brought forward again in a few days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A proof has lately forced itself on my attention of
+the confusion of mind habitual to many of the Bishops
+of the majority. I asked one of them, who had expressed
+his surprise that so much fuss was made about
+this one dogma, whether he had formed any clear conception
+of its retrospective force and examined all the
+papal decisions, from Siricius in 385 to the Syllabus of
+1864, which would be made by the infallibilist dogma
+into articles of faith. And it came out that this pastor
+of above a hundred thousand souls imagined that every
+Pope would be declared infallible, not for the past but
+for the future only!<note place='foot'>[The same strange confusion of thought seems still to prevail among
+some fervid infallibilists of the English and Irish Episcopate, to judge from
+their pastorals issued since the decree of July 18.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> But he was somewhat perplexed
+when I mentioned to him on the spur of the moment
+merely a couple of papal maxims on moral theology,
+which were now to be stamped with the seal of divinely
+inspired truths.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Saturday the 9th the special voting is to take
+place on the emendation just mentioned of the third
+chapter of the third canon in the interests of papal
+<pb n='766'/><anchor id='Pg766'/>
+absolutism, and on the same day or Monday the whole
+of the third chapter and the amendments on the fourth
+are to be voted on; on Wednesday, the 13th, the votes
+are to be taken on the whole <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> <q>en bloc.</q> As
+yet the Opposition can still be reckoned at 97, exclusive
+of Guidi and the Dominican Bishops, who may not
+improbably come to its aid at the critical moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the witticisms circulating here, for which the
+Council affords matter to genuine Romans, is the following,
+that in the sitting of July 4 there was a great
+uproar among the Bishops, they were all set by the ears
+and the Pope himself ran away, and why all this?
+<q>E perchè tutta questa cagniara? perchè il Papa vuole
+esser <emph>impeccabile</emph>, e i vescovi non lo vogliono.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='767'/><anchor id='Pg767'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixty-Sixth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, July 14, 1870.</hi>&mdash;I must again interrupt my
+narrative of the occurrences and speeches between June
+5 and 10 to communicate the details of the great event
+of the session of July 13&mdash;an event which has falsified
+all expectations on both sides, and created a sensation
+and astonishment in Rome which it will take people
+some time to recover from. Even beyond the Alps, in
+spite of the all-absorbing question of the war, it will
+rouse interest and joyful surprise. In the last few
+days before the critical morning of the 13th there was
+much discussion among the Bishops of the various
+nations as to whether they should vote a simple <q>No</q>
+or a conditional <q>Yes,</q>&mdash;a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign> or a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet juxta
+modum</foreign>. It was not merely the fourth chapter that was
+in question, which deals with infallibility, but the
+whole <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on the Papacy, which contains also the
+<pb n='768'/><anchor id='Pg768'/>
+much-decried third canon of the third chapter, establishing
+for the first time the theory of the universal
+episcopate of the Pope, the very theory Pope Gregory the
+Great characterized as an abomination and a blasphemy.
+It was known that the Bishops who are mere dilettantis
+in theology&mdash;and their number is legion, as is natural
+under the present system of episcopal appointments&mdash;would
+greatly prefer voting <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta modum</foreign>, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, with a conditioned
+<q>Yes.</q> That would always leave them free to
+reserve their further decision till the public voting <q>coram
+Sanctissimo</q> (as the Pope is here called), when only a
+direct <q>Yes</q> or <q>No</q> can be voted. Each of them
+could present in writing the conditions or wishes on
+which he desired to make his <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> dependent, and
+then say <q>Yes</q> or <q>No</q> according to his pleasure in
+the Solemn Session, if his suggestions were disregarded&mdash;<q>Yes,</q>
+if he wished to direct the lightning flashes of
+the angry Jupiter to other heads than his own; <q>No,</q>
+if he could summon manliness and courage enough at
+the last moment. The Court party and the majority
+had neglected no means of impressing on the recalcitrants
+the uselessness of their negative votes and the
+personal disadvantages to themselves. Every one was
+told, <q>It is determined irrevocably to take no account
+<pb n='769'/><anchor id='Pg769'/>
+of your <q>No,</q> and to go on to the promulgation of the
+dogma. Supported by at least 500 favourable votes,
+and throwing the surplus weight of his own vote into
+the scale, the Pope, on the 17th or 24th July, will
+walk over your heads amid the presumed acclamations
+of the whole Catholic world; and how lamentable and
+hopeless a situation will yours be then! You are then
+heretics, who have incurred the terrible penalties of the
+canon law; you have surrendered at discretion, bound
+hand and foot, to the mercy of the deeply injured Pope.
+Consider, <q>Quid sum miser tunc dicturus, quem patronum
+rogaturus?</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus they were worked on individually. And more
+drastic methods were employed as well. It was asserted
+that two documents had already been drawn up in the
+Vatican, which every Bishop would be compelled to sign
+before being allowed to leave Rome; the one a profession
+of faith comprising the new article of infallibility, and
+the other an attestation of the perfect freedom of the
+Council throughout its whole course. Whoever refused
+to sign either would thereby at once incur papal censures.
+<q>We shall thus have,</q> they were told, <q>your <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>
+and your <q>free</q> acknowledgment under your hand of
+the article of faith you denied a few days before, and
+<pb n='770'/><anchor id='Pg770'/>
+shall show it to the world. Do you wish then morally
+to annihilate yourselves in public opinion?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the Bishops who are resolved to give a negative
+vote knew well the more timorous temper of many of
+their colleagues, who were half-ready to be persuaded
+and half-ready to succumb, and remembered the Scriptural
+saying that <q>a high priest must have compassion
+on our infirmities,</q> some of them drew up a formula
+stating the basis on which the timid might vote <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet
+juxta modum</foreign>. In the preamble of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> the word
+<q>principium</q> was to be exchanged for <q>exordium,</q>
+and instead of <q>vis et virtus in eo (Papâ) consistit,</q> was
+to be put <q>præcipue in eo consistit;</q> the third canon
+of the third chapter was to be wholly omitted, and the
+word <q>episcopalis</q> left out of the chapter, and lastly,
+the formula of St. Antoninus was to be substituted for
+the fourth chapter. The proposed document ends with
+<q>Secus in Solemni Sessione dicturus sum, <emph>Non placet</emph>.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On July 12 the Bishops of the minority held the
+most largely attended international conference which
+has yet taken place; about 70 were present. Three prelates,
+two German and one French&mdash;Ketteler, Melchers
+and Archbishop Landriot of Rheims&mdash;proposed that all
+should vote <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet juxta modum</foreign>, but at the same time
+<pb n='771'/><anchor id='Pg771'/>
+hand in a precise and decided formulas the condition
+of their assent, with a declaration that, if their demands
+were rejected or inadequately complied with, they
+should be obliged to vote <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign> in the Solemn
+Session. This would have substantially secured the
+complete victory of the majority and the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>. Every
+one would have naturally said, <q>Your <q>Yes,</q> however
+conditioned, can only bear the sense that in the main
+point you agree with the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, and that main point
+lies in the two new and great articles of faith, which
+hang together and must shape the future of the Church,
+the universal episcopate of the Pope and his infallibility.
+By saying <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> you affirm these two new
+dogmas, and after that it will matter little what particular
+collateral wishes or conditions you may choose to
+add. Whether they are acceded to or not, you must in
+consistency say <q>Yes</q> on the great day of the public
+profession, when only a simple affirmative or negative
+vote can be given.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The three Cardinals, the two primates Simor and
+Ginoulhiac, Strossmayer and others, spoke out repeatedly
+and emphatically against this mischievous proposal
+which would at the last moment have frustrated all
+their hopes, and annihilated the results of seven months'
+<pb n='772'/><anchor id='Pg772'/>
+sufferings and labours. A decisive impression was
+produced by the remark of the Archbishop of Milan,
+that there were many infallibilists who on various
+grounds would vote conditionally, and this peculiar
+kind of vote, which was better adapted to courtiers
+than Bishops, had better be left to them. <q>The only
+befitting course for us,</q> he said, <q>who are convinced of
+the falsehood of the doctrine, is to say <q>No.</q></q> This
+was unanimously accepted. Tarnoczy, who for some
+time back has withdrawn from his German and Hungarian
+colleagues, and votes regularly with the majority,
+was not present. Cardinal Schwarzenberg said he
+should be glad if one of the Cardinals voted <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>
+before him, but if this did not happen he should be the
+first, and should count it a distinction to stand at the
+head of this noble band.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was remarkable how generally the view prevailed
+that scarcely ten opposing votes would really be given
+when the time came. No means were spared, by
+rumours and inventions, to spread terror and despair
+among the ranks of the Opposition. Thus the report
+was circulated in foreign journals&mdash;where you will have
+read it&mdash;as well as here, that a <q>sauve qui peut,</q> and
+<q>débandade</q> had become the watchword of the Opposition,
+<pb n='773'/><anchor id='Pg773'/>
+and not thirty would be left on the day for
+voting. We see now that this was all pure invention.
+Even Förster's departure, which I reported myself, had
+not taken place; only Greith had gone. When Darboy
+had an audience of the Pope the day before the voting,
+and said that there was a considerable number of
+Bishops who would join him in saying <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>, the
+Pope replied, <q>Perhaps many will vote <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta modum</foreign>,
+but certainly not above ten <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>.</q> For some
+time past Pius has notoriously known everything with
+absolute certainty, even the temper of distant countries.
+The formulas put into the Pope's mouth by the Roman
+Chancery, <q>proprio motu</q> and <q>ex certâ scientiâ,</q> have
+been transmuted by the habit of twenty-four years into
+actual flesh and blood with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the beginning of the sitting the news had spread
+among the majority that the negative votes would be
+much more numerous than had been supposed on the
+evening before. On this Dechamps of Mechlin went
+to the heads of the Opposition and entreated them with
+humble gestures and whining voice to vote <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta modum</foreign>,
+saying there was really some disposition with the
+authorities to insert the <q>consensus</q> and <q>testimonium
+Ecclesiarum</q> into the fourth chapter. The trick was
+<pb n='774'/><anchor id='Pg774'/>
+too barefaced to succeed, and sharp words were spoken
+on the other side. One of the Bishops said to the new
+primate, <q>C'est une impudence sans exemple,</q> and
+Darboy called the attention of the three Cardinals to this
+treacherous attempt at the last moment to divide and
+perplex the Opposition. Now began the voting <q>sub
+secreto,</q> as it was again called, and the sub-secretary
+Jacobini read the names of the Fathers from the pulpit.
+And then a wholly unexpected phenomenon came to
+light: out of 600 Fathers present in Rome&mdash;there
+were 764 in January&mdash;only 520 had appeared, and it
+was at once known that very many of the absentees
+had stayed away from dislike to the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, and to
+avoid the disagreeable consequences of a negative
+vote.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The line taken by the Orientals in the voting excites
+surprise here. The Propaganda has spared no means of
+exercising a strict supervision and control over them, and
+yet the upshot is that the most influential of them have
+voted <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>, some <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta modum</foreign>, and others have absented
+themselves. In fact all the real Eastern Bishops&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>,
+those who represent dioceses&mdash;have voted against
+the dogma. Every one acquainted with the state of things
+in Asia foresees that the promulgation of the dogma,
+<pb n='775'/><anchor id='Pg775'/>
+which will follow in spite of this, will lead to the
+definitive separation of the Uniate Churches in the East.
+But that makes not the slightest impression on the
+Pope and the Jesuits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the names of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta modum</foreign> voters were
+read out, the President said <q>quorum, quantum possible
+erit, habebitur ratio.</q> That sounded like open
+mockery: it meant, <q>We (the Deputation) have already
+settled among ourselves what is impossible, viz., making
+the co-operation of the episcopate a condition, but still
+there are some possible things. If, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, any Bishops
+wish to have <q>inerrantia</q> substituted for <q>infallibilitas,</q>
+perhaps they may be gratified.</q> But even concessions
+of that sort are doubtful, for one cannot give the lie
+to Bishop Gasser of Brixen, who has distinctly declared
+that <q>nec verbum addetur nec verbum demetur
+amplius.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the conditional voters are Dreux-Brézé, certainly
+only because the decree is not strong enough for
+him. The whole Hungarian Episcopate remained firm
+in its opposition. The Austrians know now why
+Rudigier and Fessler were given them as Bishops. I
+send you with this the authentic list of the Fathers who
+did not vote with a simple <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>. It shows that it
+<pb n='776'/><anchor id='Pg776'/>
+was just the Bishops of capital cities, as well as North
+American, Irish, English, and beyond expectation many
+North Italian prelates, who voted against the dogma.
+Only one, strictly speaking, was wholly false to his professions,
+the Bishop of Porto Rico.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Pope is still sure that at the last critical moment
+a divine miracle will enlighten the benighted minds of
+the opponents and suddenly reverse their sentiments.
+The Holy Ghost will and must do this. Pius seems to
+have clear assurances on that point. He had lately a
+remarkable conversation about it with a French Bishop,
+whom he had never seen before. As he regards every
+opponent of the dogma as his personal enemy, he
+received him as such and reproached him with being
+Cæsar's friend instead of the Pope's; the Bishop replied
+that his white hairs testified to his having nothing to
+fear or hope for, but simply to follow his conscience,
+which constrained him with many of his colleagues to
+vote against the new dogma. <q>No,</q> exclaimed Pius,
+<q>you will not vote against it; the Holy Ghost at the
+decisive hour will irresistibly enlighten you, and you
+will all say <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign>.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the French Government in 1733 had the
+cemetery of La Chaise surrounded with soldiers, to
+<pb n='777'/><anchor id='Pg777'/>
+stop the miraculous cures at the grave of the Abbé
+Paris, the inscription was found one morning over the
+entrance&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<quote rend='display'>
+<lg>
+<l>De par le roi défense à Dieu,</l>
+<l>De faire miracle en ce lieu.</l>
+</lg>
+</quote>
+
+<p>
+On the 17th or 24th July 1870 there might be
+written over the entrance of the Council Hall&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<quote rend='display'>
+<lg>
+<l>De par le Pape ordre au bon Dieu</l>
+<l>De faire miracle en ce lieu.</l>
+</lg>
+</quote>
+
+<p>
+The echo of the Vatican, Veuillot's <hi rend='italic'>Univers</hi>, has just
+been accusing the Bishops of the minority of ruining
+the papal treasury by prolonging the debates on infallibility
+through their opposition, and thus obliging the
+Pope to go on supporting his 300 episcopal foster sons,
+and buy his infallibility late and at a high price, when
+it ought to have been cast into his lap by spontaneous
+acclamation at the first. A physician has now been
+discovered for the treasury which has sickened under
+the infallibility affair. Rothschild is said to have
+been here and concluded a loan of forty million franks.
+As the deficit only amounts to thirty million, there
+remain ten million for fireworks, illuminations and
+church-decorations, the journey-money of trusty Bishops,
+and the like. But now the war is impending, and with
+<pb n='778'/><anchor id='Pg778'/>
+it the withdrawal of Peter's pence and perhaps still
+worse.<note place='foot'>Meanwhile the <hi rend='italic'>Unita</hi> of July 15 has already begun to indicate the
+wholesome political fruits which may be looked for from the dogma of
+infallibility. Gallicanism, which demanded fixed guarantees against papal
+decisions, has paved the way, according to Margotti, for constitutionalism
+and parliamentarism; for after a Pope whose decrees <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign> are not
+irreformable, comes a king limited by the Constitution, and then the era
+of parliamentary revolutions and political storms is introduced. But now
+the bright example set by the Bishops in their submission to the infallible
+Pope will restore not France only, but the whole of Europe. From them
+the nations will learn to submit as children to their sovereigns, the kingdom
+of unrighteousness will pass away, and the kingdom of God succeed.
+That is plain speaking; absolutism in the Church will lead to absolutism
+in the State. Margotti then surrenders himself to the most brilliant hopes,
+predicts unprecedented miracles, and records those which have been already
+wrought for infallibility during the Council, or will immediately be
+wrought. We cannot venture to withhold them from our readers. First,
+it seemed impossible to attain an agreement of the Bishops on the proclamation
+of infallibility; all wanted to speak, and the discussion seemed likely
+to be endless. But the Holy Ghost unexpectedly interposed; above sixty
+Bishops waved their right to speak, and the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> was voted and approved.
+Secondly, a great opposition of all the governments was feared, who
+only kept quiet while they watched the quarrels of the Bishops themselves
+in the Council. But scarcely had the Bishops shown themselves unanimous,
+when the Hohenzollern question turned up, which absorbs everybody's
+attention, and leaves the Church in peace. The third miracle is
+still in the future&mdash;the dogma will suddenly dissipate the menaces of war,
+because the word of God, like the Son of God, only comes into the world
+in the midst of universal peace.</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The following voted <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non-placet</foreign>:&mdash;1. <hi rend='italic'>Prague</hi>, Cardinal
+Prince-Archbishop Schwarzenberg; 2. <hi rend='italic'>Besançon</hi>,
+Cardinal Archbishop Mathieu; 3. <hi rend='italic'>Vienna</hi>, Cardinal
+Prince-Archbishop Rauscher; 4. <hi rend='italic'>Antioch</hi>, Patriarch
+Jussuf, of the Melchite Rite; 5. <hi rend='italic'>Babylon</hi>, Patriarch
+Audu, of the Chaldean Rite; 6. <hi rend='italic'>Gran</hi>, Archbishop
+<pb n='779'/><anchor id='Pg779'/>
+and Primate of Hungary, Simor; 7. <hi rend='italic'>Lyons</hi>, Archbishop
+Ginoulhiac; 8. <hi rend='italic'>Tuam</hi>, Archbishop MacHale; 9. <hi rend='italic'>Olmütz</hi>,
+Prince-Archbishop Fürstenberg; 10. <hi rend='italic'>Trabezund</hi>, Bishop
+Ghiureghian, of the Armenian Rite; 11. <hi rend='italic'>Munich</hi>, Archbishop
+Scherr; 12. <hi rend='italic'>Bamberg</hi>, Archbishop Deinlein; 13.
+<hi rend='italic'>Seert</hi>, Bishop Bar-Tatar, of the Chaldean Rite; 14.
+<hi rend='italic'>Halifax</hi>, Archbishop Conolly, of the Capuchin Order;
+15. <hi rend='italic'>Lemberg</hi>, Archbishop Wierzcheyski, of the Latin
+Rite; 16. <hi rend='italic'>Paris</hi>, Archbishop Darboy; 17. <hi rend='italic'>Kalocsa</hi>,
+Archbishop Haynald; 18. <hi rend='italic'>Milan</hi>, Archbishop Nazari di
+Calabiana; 19. <hi rend='italic'>Tyre</hi>, Archbishop Kauam, of the Melchite
+Rite; 20. <hi rend='italic'>Biella</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>Italy</hi>), Bishop Losanna; 21.
+<hi rend='italic'>Autun</hi>, Bishop Marguerye; 22. <hi rend='italic'>Ivrea</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>Piedmont</hi>),
+Bishop Moreno; 23. <hi rend='italic'>Dijon</hi>, Bishop Rivet; 24. <hi rend='italic'>Metz</hi>,
+Bishop Dupont des Loges; 25. <hi rend='italic'>Iglesias</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>Sardinia</hi>),
+Bishop Montixi; 26. <hi rend='italic'>Acquapendente</hi> (formerly in the
+Roman States), Bishop Pellei; 27. <hi rend='italic'>Trieste</hi>, Bishop
+Legat; 28. <hi rend='italic'>Orleans</hi>, Bishop Dupanloup; 29. <hi rend='italic'>Vezprim</hi>,
+Bishop Ranolder; 30. <hi rend='italic'>Mayence</hi>, Bishop Ketteler; 31.
+<hi rend='italic'>Bosnia</hi> and <hi rend='italic'>Syrmia</hi>, Bishop Strossmayer; 32. <hi rend='italic'>Budweis</hi>,
+Bishop Jirsik; 33. <hi rend='italic'>Breslau</hi>, Prince-Bishop Förster; 34.
+<hi rend='italic'>Kerry</hi>, Bishop Moriarty; 35. <hi rend='italic'>Leontopolis, in partibus</hi>,
+Bishop Forwerk, Apostolic Vicar of Saxony; 36. <hi rend='italic'>Plymouth</hi>,
+Bishop Vaughan; 37. <hi rend='italic'>Clifton</hi>, Bishop Clifford;
+<pb n='780'/><anchor id='Pg780'/>
+38. <hi rend='italic'>Nice</hi>, Bishop Sola; 39. <hi rend='italic'>Parenzo</hi> and <hi rend='italic'>Pola</hi>, Bishop
+Dobrilla; 40. <hi rend='italic'>Kreutz</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>in Croatia</hi>), Bishop Smiciklas, of
+the Ruthenian Rite; 41. <hi rend='italic'>Augsburgh</hi>, Bishop Dinkel; 42.
+<hi rend='italic'>Gurk</hi>, Bishop Wiery; 43. <hi rend='italic'>Caltanisetta</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>Sicily</hi>), Bishop
+Guttadauro di Reburdone; 44. <hi rend='italic'>Vacz</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>in Hungary</hi>),
+Bishop Peitler; 45. <hi rend='italic'>Marianne</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>Syria</hi>), &mdash;&mdash; of the Melchite
+Rite; 46. <hi rend='italic'>Chatham</hi>, Bishop Rogers; 47. <hi rend='italic'>Csanad</hi>
+and <hi rend='italic'>Temesvar</hi>, Bishop Bonnaz; 48. <hi rend='italic'>Pittsburg</hi>, Bishop
+Domenec; 49. <hi rend='italic'>Luzonia</hi>, Bishop Colet; 50. <hi rend='italic'>Sura, in
+partibus</hi>, Bishop Maret; 51. <hi rend='italic'>St. Brieuc</hi>, Bishop David;
+52. <hi rend='italic'>Trèves</hi>, Bishop Eberhard; 53. <hi rend='italic'>Coutance</hi>, Bishop
+Bravard; 54. <hi rend='italic'>Lavant</hi>, Bishop Stepischnigg; 55. <hi rend='italic'>Soissons</hi>,
+Bishop Dours; 56. <hi rend='italic'>Akra</hi>, Bishop Mellus, of the Chaldean
+Rite; 57. <hi rend='italic'>Siebenbürgen</hi>, Bishop Fogarasz; 58. <hi rend='italic'>Châlons</hi>,
+Bishop Meignan; 59. <hi rend='italic'>Valence</hi>, Bishop Gueullette; 60.
+<hi rend='italic'>Perpignan</hi>, Bishop Ramadié; 61. <hi rend='italic'>Paleopolis, in partibus</hi>,
+Bishop Mariassy (<hi rend='italic'>Hungary</hi>); 62. <hi rend='italic'>Petricola</hi> or <hi rend='italic'>Little
+Rock</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>United States</hi>), Bishop Fitzgerald; 63. <hi rend='italic'>Marseilles</hi>,
+Bishop Place; 64. <hi rend='italic'>Cahors</hi>, Bishop Grimardias; 65.
+<hi rend='italic'>Osnaburgh</hi>, Bishop Beckmann; 66. <hi rend='italic'>Szathmar</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>Hungary</hi>),
+Bishop Virò de Keydi Polany; 67. <hi rend='italic'>Munkacs</hi>, Bishop
+Pankovics, of the Ruthenian Rite; 68. <hi rend='italic'>Bayeux</hi>, Bishop
+Hugonin; 69. <hi rend='italic'>Raab</hi>, Bishop &mdash;&mdash;; 70. <hi rend='italic'>La Rochelle</hi>,
+Bishop Benedetto; 71. <hi rend='italic'>Nancy</hi>, Bishop Foullon; 72.
+<pb n='781'/><anchor id='Pg781'/>
+<hi rend='italic'>Constantine</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>Algiers</hi>), Bishop de las Cases; 73. <hi rend='italic'>Oran</hi>
+(<hi rend='italic'>Algiers</hi>), Bishop Callot; 74. <hi rend='italic'>Gap</hi>, Bishop Guilbert; 75.
+<hi rend='italic'>Ermeland</hi>, Bishop Crementz; 76. <hi rend='italic'>Rochester</hi>, Bishop
+MacQuaid; 77. <hi rend='italic'>Louisville</hi>, Bishop Kenrick; 78. <hi rend='italic'>Cassovia</hi>,
+Bishop Perger (Hungary); 79. <hi rend='italic'>Agathopolis</hi>, Bishop
+Namszanowski, Provost of the Prussian Army in Berlin;
+80. <hi rend='italic'>Montreal</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>Canada</hi>), Bishop Bourget; 81. <hi rend='italic'>Grosswardein</hi>,
+Bishop Lipovniczky; 82. <hi rend='italic'>Fünfkirchen</hi>, Bishop
+Kovacs; 83. <hi rend='italic'>Steinamanger</hi>, Bishop Szenczy; 84. <hi rend='italic'>Rottenburg</hi>,
+Bishop Hefele; 85. <hi rend='italic'>Ajaccio</hi>, Bishop Sante
+Casanelli d'Istria, and three more whose names were
+omitted in the official catalogue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There voted <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet juxta modum</foreign>:&mdash;1. De Silvestri,
+Cardinal-Priest; 2. Trevisanato, Cardinal Patriarch of
+Venice; 3. Guidi, Cardinal Archbishop of Bologna;
+4. <hi rend='italic'>Salsburg</hi>, Archbishop and Primate Tarnoczy; 5.
+<hi rend='italic'>Oregon City</hi>, Archbishop Blanchet; 6. <hi rend='italic'>Nisibis, in partibus</hi>,
+Archbishop Tizzani; 7. <hi rend='italic'>Tyre and Sidon</hi>, Archbishop
+Bostani, Maronite; 8. <hi rend='italic'>Manila</hi>, Archbishop Melithon-Martinez;
+9. <hi rend='italic'>Granada</hi>, Archbishop Monzon y Martins;
+10. <hi rend='italic'>Avignon</hi>, Archbishop Dubrevil; 11. <hi rend='italic'>New York</hi>,
+Archbishop MacCloskey; 12. <hi rend='italic'>Cologne</hi>, Archbishop
+Melchers; 13. <hi rend='italic'>Melitene, in partibus</hi>, Archbishop Mérode;
+14. <hi rend='italic'>Rheims</hi>, Archbishop Landriot; 15. <hi rend='italic'>Sens</hi>, Archbishop
+<pb n='782'/><anchor id='Pg782'/>
+Bernardou; 16. <hi rend='italic'>Burgos</hi>, Archbishop Yusto; 17.
+<hi rend='italic'>Ventimiglia</hi> (<hi rend='italic'>Italy</hi>), Bishop Biale; 18. <hi rend='italic'>Columbica</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in
+partibus</foreign>, Bishop Verolles, Apostolic Vicar in Leao-Tung
+(China); 19. <hi rend='italic'>Canopo</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Besi; 20. <hi rend='italic'>Sira</hi>,
+Bishop Alberti, Apostolic Delegate in Greece; 21.
+<hi rend='italic'>Zenopolis</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Moccagatta, Apostolic
+Vicar in Xan-Tung; 22. <hi rend='italic'>Lipari</hi>, Bishop Ideo; 23. <hi rend='italic'>Birmingham</hi>,
+Bishop Ullathorne; 24. <hi rend='italic'>Vancouver</hi>, Bishop
+Demers; 25. <hi rend='italic'>Mileto</hi>, Bishop Mincione; 26. <hi rend='italic'>Moulins</hi>,
+Bishop Dreux-Brézé; 27. <hi rend='italic'>Gezira</hi>, Bishop Hindi, of the
+Chaldean Rite; 28. <hi rend='italic'>Hadrianopolis, in partibus</hi>, Bishop
+De la Place, Apostolic Vicar in Tsche-Kiang; 29. <hi rend='italic'>Tarnovia</hi>,
+Bishop Pukalski (Galicia); 30. <hi rend='italic'>Chartres</hi>, Bishop
+Regnault; 31. <hi rend='italic'>Urgel</hi>, Bishop Caixal y Estrade; 32.
+<hi rend='italic'>Monterey</hi>, Bishop Amat; 33. <hi rend='italic'>Tanes</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop
+Salzano, Dominican; 34. <hi rend='italic'>Newcastle</hi>, Bishop Chadwick;
+35. <hi rend='italic'>Lacedonia</hi>, Bishop Majorsini; 36. <hi rend='italic'>Todi</hi>, Bishop
+Rosati; 37. <hi rend='italic'>Avellino</hi>, Bishop Gallo; 38. <hi rend='italic'>Amelia</hi>, Bishop
+Pace; 39. <hi rend='italic'>Nola</hi>, Bishop Formisano; 40. <hi rend='italic'>Imola</hi>, Bishop
+Moretti; 41. <hi rend='italic'>Zamora</hi>, Bishop Condé y Corral; 42.
+<hi rend='italic'>Avila</hi>, Bishop Blanco, Dominican; 43. <hi rend='italic'>Savannah</hi>, Bishop
+Verot; 44. <hi rend='italic'>Cuenca</hi>, Bishop Payà y Rico; 45. <hi rend='italic'>Cajazzo</hi>,
+Bishop Riccio; 46. <hi rend='italic'>Teramo</hi>, Bishop Milella, Dominican;
+47. <hi rend='italic'>Nocera</hi>, Bishop Pettinari; 48. <hi rend='italic'>St. Christophori</hi>, Bishop
+<pb n='783'/><anchor id='Pg783'/>
+De Urguinaona; 49. <hi rend='italic'>Clariopolis</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bsciai, Apostolic
+Vicar in Egypt, of the Coptic Rite; 50. <hi rend='italic'>Erzeroum</hi>,
+Bishop Melchisedechian, of the Armenian Rite; 51. <hi rend='italic'>Monte
+Fiascone</hi>, Bishop Bovieri; 52. <hi rend='italic'>Savona</hi>, Bishop Cerruti; 53.
+<hi rend='italic'>Agathonica</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Pagnucci; 54. <hi rend='italic'>Ascalon</hi>,
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Meurin, Society of Jesus; 55. <hi rend='italic'>Dionysia</hi>,
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Gentili; 56. <hi rend='italic'>Cattaro</hi>, Bishop
+Marchich; 57. <hi rend='italic'>Serena</hi>, Bishop Orrego; 58. Mardin,
+Bishop of the Chaldean Rite; 59. <hi rend='italic'>Tiberias</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>,
+Bishop Valeschi; 60. Guardi, General of the Ministers of
+the Sick; 61. The Abbot of the Camaldolese in Etruria.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The following abstained from voting, though in Rome
+at the time:&mdash;<hi rend='italic'>Cardinals</hi>: 1. Mattei, 2. Orfei, 3. Quaglia,
+4. Hohenlohe, 5. Berardi, 6. Antonelli, 7. Grassellini;
+8. The Patriarch Harcus of Antioch, of the Syrian Rite;
+9. The Archbishop and Primate Salomone of Salerno;
+10. The Maronite Archbishop Aun of Beirout; 11, 12.
+Two other Archbishops; 13. <hi rend='italic'>Aleppo</hi>, Archbishop Matar, of
+the Maronite Rite; 14. <hi rend='italic'>Venezuela</hi>, Archbishop Guevara;
+15. <hi rend='italic'>Utrecht</hi>, Archbishop Zwysen; 16. <hi rend='italic'>Tours</hi>, Archbishop
+Guibert; 17. <hi rend='italic'>Rodi</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Archbishop
+Pace-Forno, Bishop of Malta; 18. <hi rend='italic'>Mardin</hi>, Archbishop
+Nasarian, of the Armenian Rite; 19. <hi rend='italic'>Alby</hi>, Archbishop
+Lyonnet; 20. Iconium, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Archbishop Puecher
+<pb n='784'/><anchor id='Pg784'/>
+Passavalli; 21. <hi rend='italic'>Guadalaxara</hi>, Archbishop Loya;
+22. <hi rend='italic'>Amida</hi>, Archbishop Bahtiarian, of the Armenian
+Rite; 23. <hi rend='italic'>Tournay</hi>, Bishop Labis; 24. <hi rend='italic'>Terni</hi>, Bishop
+Severa; 25. <hi rend='italic'>Veglia</hi>, Bishop Vitezich; 26. <hi rend='italic'>Almira</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in
+partibus</foreign>, Bishop Carli, Capuchin; 27. <hi rend='italic'>Montauban</hi>,
+Bishop Doney; 28. <hi rend='italic'>Cava</hi>, Bishop Fertilla; 29. <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>,
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Grioglio; 30. <hi rend='italic'>Segni</hi> (Papal State),
+Bishop Ricci; 31. <hi rend='italic'>Paphos</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Alcazar,
+Dominican Vicar Apostolic; 32. <hi rend='italic'>Vicenza</hi>, Bishop Varina;
+33. <hi rend='italic'>Salford</hi>, Bishop Turner; 34. <hi rend='italic'>Catanzaro</hi>, Bishop de
+Franco; 35. <hi rend='italic'>Bergamo</hi>, Bishop Speranza; 36. <hi rend='italic'>Savannah</hi>,
+&mdash;; 37. <hi rend='italic'>St. Angelo in Lombardy</hi>, Bishop Fanelli; 38.
+<hi rend='italic'>Dromore</hi>, Bishop Leahy, Dominican; 39. <hi rend='italic'>Glarus</hi>, &mdash;;
+40. <hi rend='italic'>Birta</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Pinsoneault; 41. <hi rend='italic'>Fernes</hi>,
+Bishop Furlong; 42. <hi rend='italic'>Anagni</hi>, Bishop Pagliari; 43.
+<hi rend='italic'>Siguenza</hi>, Bishop Benavides; 44. <hi rend='italic'>Ceramo</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>,
+Bishop Jeancard, Suffragan of Marseilles; 45. <hi rend='italic'>Polemonia</hi>,
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Pinchon; 46. <hi rend='italic'>Lipari</hi>,
+Bishop Athanasio; 47. <hi rend='italic'>Apamea</hi>, Archbishop Ata, of the
+Melchite Rite; 48. <hi rend='italic'>Mindus</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Papardo
+del Parco; 49. <hi rend='italic'>Bursa</hi>, Bishop Tilkian, of the Armenian
+Rite; 50. <hi rend='italic'>Astorga</hi>, Bishop Arguelles y Miranda; 51. <hi rend='italic'>Comacchio</hi>,
+Bishop Spoglia; 52. <hi rend='italic'>Charlottetown</hi>, Bishop MacIntyre;
+53. <hi rend='italic'>Vallis Pratensis</hi>, &mdash; (?); 54. <hi rend='italic'>Lamego</hi>,
+<pb n='785'/><anchor id='Pg785'/>
+Bishop de Vasconcellos Periera de Mello; 55. <hi rend='italic'>Montpellier</hi>,
+Bishop Curtier; 56. <hi rend='italic'>Barcelona</hi>, Bishop Monserrat
+y Navarro; 57. <hi rend='italic'>Amatunto</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop
+Galezki, Apostolic Vicar in Cracow; 58. <hi rend='italic'>Kilmore</hi>,
+Bishop Conaty; 59. <hi rend='italic'>Priene</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Cosi;
+60. <hi rend='italic'>Tuy</hi>, Bishop Garcia y Anton; 61. <hi rend='italic'>Puno</hi>, Bishop
+Huerta; 62. <hi rend='italic'>Adelaide</hi>, Bishop Shiel; 63. <hi rend='italic'>Albany</hi>
+(<hi rend='italic'>America</hi>), Bishop Conroy; 64. <hi rend='italic'>Concordia</hi>, Bishop
+Frangipani; 65. <hi rend='italic'>St. Hyacinth</hi>, Bishop Laroque; 66.
+<hi rend='italic'>Dubuque</hi>, Bishop Hennessy; 67. <hi rend='italic'>Vannes</hi>, Bishop Becel;
+68. <hi rend='italic'>Goulburn</hi>, Bishop Lannigan; 69. <hi rend='italic'>St. Germani bei
+Monte Cassino</hi>, &mdash; (?); 70. <hi rend='italic'>Verdun</hi>, Bishop Hacquard;
+71. <hi rend='italic'>Egéa</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Reynaud; 72. <hi rend='italic'>St. Giov.
+di Cuyo</hi>, Bishop Achaval; 73. <hi rend='italic'>Cirene</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>,
+Bishop Canzi; 74. <hi rend='italic'>Rodiopolis</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, Bishop Tosi;
+75. <hi rend='italic'>Buffalo</hi>, Bishop Ryan; 76. <hi rend='italic'>Adramyttium</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>,
+Bishop Gibbons; 77. <hi rend='italic'>Coria</hi>, Bishop Nuñez; 78.
+<hi rend='italic'>Heliopolis</hi>, Bishop Nasser, of the Melchite Rite; 79. <hi rend='italic'>Titopolis</hi>,
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>in partibus</foreign>, &mdash; (?); 80, 81. Abbates nullius; 82, 83.
+Burchall, President of the Benedictine Congregation in
+England; 84. The Abbot of Janow, Apostolic Administrator
+in Russia; 85. Montis Coronæ; 86-91. These
+names could not be announced on account of the great
+confusion.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='786'/><anchor id='Pg786'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixty-Seventh Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, July 16, 1870.</hi>&mdash;As I had to report in my last
+letter, the attempt of the Legates and the Deputation
+to outwit and catch the minority by a violation of their
+own order of business had all but succeeded. Darboy
+and Strossmayer frustrated this plot, on which it is
+literally true that the fate of the Church was staked.
+For the third canon of the third chapter had been
+brought forward in so enlarged and altered a form, that
+it involved in substance the abolition of the entire
+episcopate, as an integral constituent of the Christian
+Church, and substituted for it the papal <q>totality,</q> as
+the theologians of the seventeenth century called it;
+<hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the theory that in the whole Church there is one
+sole individual who is in exclusive possession of all
+plenary powers and all ecclesiastical rights. The weight
+and importance of the doctrine thereby designed to be
+<pb n='787'/><anchor id='Pg787'/>
+for the first time imposed on the Church cannot even
+be made intelligible in a few words. Most readers are
+naturally unaware of the sense attached in canon law
+and the language of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi> to the words, <q>potestas
+immediata et ordinaria.</q> Well! they mean that all
+Christians, whether laymen or clerics, are personally
+subjects, body and soul, of their lord and master, the
+Pope, who can impose on them without restriction
+whatever commands seem good to him. There are,
+besides the Pope, who exercises immediate authority
+by virtue of his universal episcopate, papal commissaries
+in the separate dioceses, who call themselves
+Bishops, and are so named by the Roman Chancery.
+They exercise the powers delegated to them by the one
+true and universal Bishop, and carry out the particular
+orders they receive from Rome. According to this
+view the whole Church has, properly speaking, no other
+right or law or order but the pleasure of the reigning
+Pope. This is the most perfect form of absolutism
+ever yet excogitated in any man's brains.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The order of business prohibits any alteration in the
+text of the decrees being voted upon without previous
+discussion in Council. That however was now attempted,
+and the violation of the order of business by
+<pb n='788'/><anchor id='Pg788'/>
+the Legates themselves was so flagrant, the design of
+fraud so palpable, that the incident continued to be the
+subject of general conversation up to the 12th July.
+When the plot had miscarried, it was alleged in excuse
+that the previous discussion had been forgotten!&mdash;forgotten
+precisely in the case of the most important
+article yet brought forward, and of a change of such
+immeasurable weight that one may truly say no discussion
+of equal weight and influence has been passed
+in any Council during 1800 years. The affair of course
+made a great sensation. The words <q>deceit</q> and
+<q>lying</q> were used more than once in the national
+meetings of the Opposition Bishops, and it was urged
+that the whole Deputation <hi rend='italic'>de Fide</hi> were accomplices of
+the Legates in this unworthy trick, and that the
+Bishops were being compelled in a truly revolting
+manner to vote on alterations of the most comprehensive
+kind, which had only been communicated to them
+the day before. A short memorandum was issued by
+the French Bishops, which recommended that this
+opportunity should be seized for leaving Rome. It
+runs as follows:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>(1). L'heure de la Providence a sonné: le moment
+décisif de sauver l'Église est arrivé. (2.) Par les additiones
+<pb n='789'/><anchor id='Pg789'/>
+faites au <hi rend='smallcaps'>iii.</hi> canon du 3me chap. la Commission
+<hi rend='italic'>de Fide</hi> a violé le règlement qui ne permet l'introduction
+d'aucun amendement sans discussion conciliaire. (3.)
+L'addition subreptice est d'une importance incalculable;
+c'est le changement de la constitution de l'Église, la
+monarchie pure, absolue, indivisible du Pape, l'abolition
+de la judicature et de la co-souveraineté des évêques,
+l'affirmation et la définition anticipée de l'infaillibilité
+separée et personnelle. (4.) Le devoir et l'honneur ne
+permettent pas de voter sans discussion ce canon, qui
+contient une immense révolution. La discussion pourrait
+et devrait durer six mois, parce qu'il s'agit de la
+question capitale, la constitution même de la souveraineté
+dans l'Église. (5.) Cette discussion est impossible
+à cause des fatigues extrêmes de la saison et des
+dispositions de la majorité. (6.) Une seule chose,
+digne et honorable, reste à faire: Demander immédiatement
+la prorogation du Concile au mois d'Octobre, et
+présenter une declaration, ou seraient énumérées toutes
+les protestations déjà faites, et où la dernière violation
+du règlement, le mépris de la dignité et de la liberté
+des évêques seraient mis en lumière. Annoncer en
+même temps un départ, qui ne peut plus être différé.
+(7.) Par le départ ainsi motivé d'un nombre considérable
+<pb n='790'/><anchor id='Pg790'/>
+d'évêques de toutes les nations, l'œcuménicité du
+Concile cesserait et tous les actes, qu'il pourrait faire
+ensuite, seraient d'une autorité nulle. (8.) Le courage
+et le dévouement de la minorité auraient, dans le
+monde, un retentissement immense. Le Concile se
+réunirait au mois d'Octobre dans des conditions infiniment
+meilleures. Toutes les questions, à peine ébauchées,
+pourraient être reprises, traitées avec dignité et
+liberté. L'Église et l'ordre moral du monde seraient
+sauvés.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the majority of the Opposition did not assent to
+this; they resolved to present another Protest, which
+the Court party might apply, like its predecessors, <q>ad
+piper et quidquid chartis amicitur ineptis.</q> It was
+drawn up by Bishop Dinkel of Augsburgh, and signed,
+so far as I know, by all of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the evening of the 9th July a proposal of a new
+formula of infallibility was distributed to the Bishops;
+it was apparently designed to split up the Opposition,
+and was broad, declamatory, full of quotations, and
+lavish of assurances that the Roman See has always
+administered its supreme teaching office in the most excellent
+manner and proclaimed nothing but truth. Now,
+it was added, since there has been a great deal of contradition,
+<pb n='791'/><anchor id='Pg791'/>
+it is necessary to define that its <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex cathedrâ</foreign>
+decisions are infallible, and its decrees on faith and
+morals irreformable by virtue of the divine promise
+given to it. This new production was discussed in the
+French and German conferences and rejected, although
+one of the most influential German Bishops, Ketteler,
+had taken it under his protection. He assured them
+that the Deputation had unanimously resolved that no
+change or concession by a hair's-breadth should be
+allowed in this form of words, for to deny papal infallibility
+involved a denial of the primacy altogether.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the Jesuit Franzelin had received orders
+from the highest authority to revise afresh the formula
+adopted by the Deputation, with which Schrader is said
+to be very ill satisfied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the sitting of July 11, first the Bishop of Trevisa,
+as a member of the Deputation, defended the notorious
+decree in the third canon of the third chapter, which is to
+revolutionize the whole constitution of the Church in the
+sense of papal absolutism. Then the votes were taken,
+by rising and sitting down, on the weightiest and most
+pregnant article that has been laid before any Council
+for 600 years, and the uncertainty in this method of
+voting, wholly unprecedented in Church history, was
+<pb n='792'/><anchor id='Pg792'/>
+so great that according to the majority only 50 or 60
+voted against it, while the minority reckon between 90
+and 100 adverse votes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Bishop Gasser of Brixen made a speech three
+hours long in the name of the Deputation on the infallibility
+decree, which in its new form&mdash;and this he
+declared to be the <foreign rend='italic'>ultimatum</foreign>&mdash;had been enriched with
+an anathema against those who <q>contradicere præsumpserint.</q>
+Gasser was unwilling to be left behind by
+Manning, Dechamps, Dreux-Brézé and the Spaniards.
+He vindicated the doctrines of Cardinal Cajetan against
+Ketteler.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Cardinal Guidi had been so powerfully
+belaboured, that it had frightened him, and he now
+voted for the third chapter with the majority. The
+process which had been found so effective in France, of
+raising their diocesan clergy against fallibilist Bishops,
+had been applied to him too by means of agents sent to
+Bologna. The apostasy of Archbishop Tarnoczy of
+Salzburg, who also voted with the majority, excited
+grief but no surprise. While the occupant of one of the
+oldest Sees of Germany, the successor of Arno, Pilgrim
+and Colloredo, flung away his own rights and those of
+his successors like so many hollow nutshells, even
+<pb n='793'/><anchor id='Pg793'/>
+Cardinal Silvestri voted against the third chapter and
+the anathema attached to the fourth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The result of the 13th July has acted like an earthquake,
+shaking and confusing for the moment men's
+heads and plans of operation. Even if half the voters
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta modum</foreign> are abstracted, as belonging to the majority,
+there remain 31 votes among them in favour of
+essential changes in the fourth chapter, changes which
+the Deputation has declared to be absolutely inadmissible,
+and which, if admitted, would offend one section of
+the majority. This last consequence would not of course
+matter at all; a single word from the Pope would set
+it aside at once, for it is self-evident that no Bishop
+who is convinced of his unconditional inerrancy could
+hesitate for a moment to vote for a decree sanctioned
+by him. Still the perplexity is great. If the decree,
+as voted by the majority, is brought forward at the
+public session, some 120 negative votes may be expected.
+But the Pope is resolved to become infallible <q>senza
+conditione,</q> as he says.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is now often said that on the day of the Solemn
+Session the Holy Ghost will yet most assuredly work a
+wonderful miracle and convert the Opposition so suddenly
+that, although they had entered the Council Hall
+<pb n='794'/><anchor id='Pg794'/>
+resolved to say <q>No,</q> they will say <q>Yes.</q> Some, including
+Antonelli, vote for conciliatory measures and concessions,
+which however the Deputation on Faith declares
+to be impossible. The other very numerous party says
+on the contrary that the unexpected force and extent
+of the opposition to so fundamental a dogma makes
+an anathema all the more necessary. A new plan of
+operations has now been hit upon, which is greatly
+favoured by the recent deaths. The grand Session for
+proclaiming the dogma had been fixed for the 17th,
+and many among the minority were with great difficulty
+persuaded to remain till that critical day. But
+now the 25th is talked of.<note place='foot'>The impending war led to its being held earlier.</note> At the same time the
+report is circulated and confirmed by Antonelli, that
+there will be no prorogation even at the end of July or
+beginning of August, but the Council will continue,
+though many Bishops, on requesting leave, will be
+permitted to depart. It is urgently necessary, according
+to Antonelli, to settle the questions about the
+Oriental Rite. Yet for centuries the Court of Rome
+has not troubled any Council with these affairs, but
+settled and regulated them by itself, as is testified by
+a whole series of papal decrees. And after infallibility
+<pb n='795'/><anchor id='Pg795'/>
+is proclaimed, it is utterly superfluous to keep
+hundreds of foreign Bishops here on that account.
+But it is known that the new dogma will lead to the
+separation of the Orientals, and so their Bishops are
+to be kept here longer as hostages, and the name of
+the Council is to supply the pretext. And it is hoped
+that the French and German Bishops will the more
+certainly ask leave and go home, so that the Opposition
+may be reduced to a small handful. The Pope
+himself appears greatly to desire this, as was at once
+inferred from his remark that the Archbishop of Paris
+is staying on a long time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Five Bishops, including Förster of Breslau, actually
+took their departure on the 14th.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='796'/><anchor id='Pg796'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixty-Eighth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, July 17, 1870.</hi>&mdash;All the Bishops of the
+minority have left Rome, after presenting a statement
+of their attitude towards the decrees on the Papacy.
+They made a last attempt, immediately before going,
+to move the Pope at least not to hurry on the affair but
+to grant some respite by proroguing the Council. At
+twelve o'clock to-day he received a deputation headed
+by Darboy and Simor. Darboy, who spoke first, represented
+to him the great and manifold dangers the
+definition would unquestionably give rise to for the
+whole Church. Hitherto Pius had met all suggestions
+of scruple by appealing to his <q>I am Tradition</q>&mdash;his
+already assured infallibility. This time he did not do
+so. He fell back on the ground of its being <q>too late.</q>
+Matters had gone too far, and the whole Christian
+world was now too much occupied and too powerfully
+excited about the question. Besides, the Council had
+<pb n='797'/><anchor id='Pg797'/>
+already passed a decree by a considerable majority,
+and he was therefore in no position to put a check on
+the Council, which was now in full swing and urgently
+pressing for a final decision on this question. The
+promulgation of the decree of the majority will accordingly
+follow to-morrow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Orientals have subscribed the declaration of the
+minority. Two German Bishops only, Melchers and
+Ketteler, have withheld their signature and presented a
+separate declaration of their own to the Pope. The
+manifesto of the minority runs thus:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<lg>
+<l><q rend='pre'><hi rend='italic'>Beatissime Pater!</hi></q></l>
+</lg>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>In Congregatione generali die 13 h. m. habitâ, dedimus
+suffragia nostra super schemate primæ Constitutionis
+dogmaticæ de Ecclesiâ Christi.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Notum est Sanctitati Vestræ 88 Patres fuisse, qui,
+conscientiâ urgente et amore Sanctæ Ecclesiæ permoti,
+suffragium suum per verba <emph>non placet</emph> emiserunt; 62
+alios, qui suffragati sunt per verba <emph>placet juxta modum</emph>,
+denique 70 circiter qui a congregatione abfuerunt
+atque a suffragio emittendo abstinuerunt. His accedunt
+et alii, qui, infirmitatibus aut aliis gravioribus
+rationibus ducti, ad suas diœceses reversi sunt.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Hâc ratione Sanctitati Vestræ et toto mundo suffragia
+<pb n='798'/><anchor id='Pg798'/>
+nostra nota atque manifesta fuere, patuitque quam
+multis episcopis sententia nostra probatur, atque hoc
+modo munus officiumque quod nobis incumbit persolvimus.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Ab eo inde tempore nihil prorsus evenit quod
+sententiam nostram mutaret, quin imo multa eaque
+gravissima acciderunt, quæ nos in proposito nostro
+confirmaverunt. Atque ideo nostra jam edita suffragia
+nos renovare ac confirmare declaramus.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Confirmantes itaque per hanc scripturam suffragia
+nostra a Sessione publicâ die 18 h. m. habendâ abesse
+constituimus. Pietas enim filialis ac reverentia quæ
+missos nostros nuperrime ad pedes Sanctitatis Vestræ
+adduxere, non sinunt nos in causâ Sanctitatis Vestræ
+personam adeo proxime concernente palam et in facie
+patris dicere <emph>non placet</emph>.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Et aliunde suffragia in Solenni Sessione edenda
+repeterent dumtaxat suffragia in generali Congregatione
+deprompta.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Redimus itaque sine morâ ad greges nostros, quibus
+post tam longam absentiam ob belli timores et præsertim
+summas eorum spirituales indigentias summopere
+necessarii sumus; dolentes, quod, ob tristia in
+quibus versamur rerum adjuncta etiam conscientiarum
+<pb n='799'/><anchor id='Pg799'/>
+pacem et tranquillitatem turbatam inter fideles nostros
+reperturi simus.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Interea Ecclesiam Dei et Sanctitatem Vestram, cui
+intemeratam fidem et obedientiam profitemur, D. N. J. C.
+gratiæ et præsidio toto corde commendantes sumus
+Sanctitatis Vestræ</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>devotissimi et obedientissimi filii.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q><hi rend='smallcaps'>Romæ</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>17 Jul. 1870</hi>.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='800'/><anchor id='Pg800'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Sixty-Ninth Letter.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Rome, July 19, 1870.</hi>&mdash;On the evening of the 15th
+a deputation of the Bishops of the minority waited
+on the Pope, consisting of Simor, Primate of Hungary,
+Archbishops Ginoulhiac, Darboy and Scherr (of
+Munich), Ketteler and Rivet, Bishop of Dijon. After
+waiting an hour they were admitted at 9 o'clock in the
+evening. What they tried to obtain was in fact much
+less than the Opposition had hitherto aimed at: they
+only asked for the withdrawal of the addition to the
+third chapter, which assigns to the Pope the exclusive
+possession of all ecclesiastical powers, and the insertion
+in the fourth chapter of a clause limiting his infallibility
+to those decisions which he pronounces <q>innixus
+testimonio Ecclesiarum.</q> Pius gave an answer which
+will sound in Germany like a maliciously invented
+fable,&mdash;<q>Je ferai mon possible, mes chers fils, mais je
+n'ai pas encore lu le Schéma; je ne sais pas ce qu'il
+<pb n='801'/><anchor id='Pg801'/>
+contient.</q> And he then requested Darboy, who had
+acted as spokesman, to give him the petition of the
+minority in writing. He promised to do so, and added,
+not without irony, that he would take the liberty of
+sending with it to his Holiness the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, which the
+Deputation on Faith and the Legates had with such
+culpable levity omitted to lay before him, when it
+wanted only two days to the promulgation of the
+dogma, thereby exposing him to the peril of having to
+proclaim a decree he was ignorant of. This Darboy
+did, and in a second letter to the Deputation severely
+censured their negligence in not even having communicated
+the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> to the chief personage, the Pope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pius added further, whether ironically or in earnest
+I know not, that if only the minority would increase
+their 88 votes to 100, he would see what could be
+done. He concluded by assuring them it was notorious
+that the whole Church had always taught the
+unconditional infallibility of the Pope. Bishop Ketteler
+then came forward, flung himself on his knees
+before the Pope, and entreated for several minutes
+that the Father of the Catholic world would make
+some concession to restore peace and her lost unity to
+the Church and the episcopate. It was a peculiar
+<pb n='802'/><anchor id='Pg802'/>
+spectacle to witness these two men, of kindred and yet
+widely diverse nature, in such an attitude, the one
+prostrate on the ground before the other. Pius is
+<q>totus teres atque rotundus,</q> firm and immoveable,
+smooth and hard as marble, infinitely self-satisfied intellectually,
+mindless and ignorant, without any understanding
+of the mental conditions and needs of mankind,
+without any notion of the character of foreign
+nations, but as credulous as a nun, and above all penetrated
+through and through with reverence for his own
+person as the organ of the Holy Ghost, and therefore
+an absolutist from head to heel, and filled with the
+thought, <q>I and none beside me.</q> He knows and
+believes that the holy Virgin, with whom he is on the
+most intimate terms, will indemnify him for the loss of
+land and subjects by means of the infallibility doctrine
+and the restoration of the papal dominion over states
+and peoples as well as over Churches. He also believes
+firmly in the miraculous emanations from the sepulchre
+of St. Peter. At the feet of this man the German
+Bishop flung himself, <q>ipso Papâ papalior,</q> a zealot
+for the ideal greatness and unapproachable dignity of
+the Papacy, and at the same time inspired by the
+aristocratic feeling of a Westphalian nobleman and
+<pb n='803'/><anchor id='Pg803'/>
+the hierarchical self-consciousness of a Bishop and
+successor of the ancient chancellor of the Empire, while
+yet he is surrounded by the intellectual atmosphere of
+Germany, and with all his firmness of belief is sickly
+with the pallor of thought, and inwardly struggling with
+the terrible misgiving that after all historical facts are
+right, and that the ship of the <hi rend='italic'>Curia</hi>, though for the
+moment it proudly rides the waves with its sails swelled
+by a favourable wind, will be wrecked on that rock at
+last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The prostration of the Bishop of Mayence seemed to
+make some impression on Pius. He dismissed the
+deputation in a hopeful temper. It was of short duration.
+For directly the report got about that the Pope
+was yielding, Manning and Senestrey (<foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>de grands effets
+par de petites causes</foreign>) went to the Pope and assured him
+that all was now ripe, and the great majority enthusiastically
+set on the most absolute and uncompromising
+form of the infallibilist theory, and at the same time
+frightened him by the warning that, if he made any
+concession, he would be disgraced in history as a second
+Honorius. That was enough to stifle any thought of
+moderation that might have been awakened in his
+soul.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='804'/><anchor id='Pg804'/>
+
+<p>
+The sitting of July 16 was held to consider the proposals
+of those who had voted <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>juxta modum</foreign>. The
+Legates had promised to pay as much consideration as
+was possible to their wishes, and they redeemed their
+pledge by striking out one passage and inserting another.
+The majority decided, on the motion of certain
+Spaniards, which was adopted by the Deputation on Faith,
+to strike out the words at the opening of the fourth
+chapter, saying the Pope will define nothing <q>nisi quod
+antiquitus tenet cum cæteris Ecclesiis Apostolica Sedes.</q>
+This was felt to impose too narrow limits on the Pope's
+infallibility and arbitrary power of defining. And as
+the minority had the day before expressed to the Pope
+their special desire that the consent of the Church
+should be laid down as a requisite condition of doctrinal
+definitions, it was now resolved, in direct contradiction
+to their wishes, again on the motion of Spanish Bishops,
+not only to leave the words <q>definitiones Pontificis ex
+sese seu per sese esse irreformabiles,</q> but to add to
+them <q>non autem ex consensu Ecclesiæ.</q> And thus
+the infallibilist decree, as it is now to be received under
+anathema by the Catholic world, is an eminently Spanish
+production, as is fitting for a doctrine which was
+born and reared under the shadow of the Inquisition.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='805'/><anchor id='Pg805'/>
+
+<p>
+In the last sitting of the Congregation three Bishops
+of the Deputation on Faith spoke, the Neapolitan
+D'Avanzo, Bishop of Calvi and Teano, Zinelli, Bishop
+of Rovigo, the author of the notorious addition to the
+third chapter of the third canon, and Gasser, Bishop of
+Brixen. D'Avanzo was jocose: <q>As,</q> said he, <q>the
+angel bade the Apostle John swallow a book, telling
+him it would make his belly bitter but taste sweet as
+honey in his mouth, so must we Bishops swallow this
+infallibilist <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, and I have done so already. It will
+no doubt give many of us a stomach-ache, but we must
+act as if we had honey in our mouths.</q> Gasser, who as
+a speaker is <q>se ipse amans sine rivali,</q> to quote Cicero's
+saying about Pompey, made a speech of endless length,
+exhausting the patience of his hearers; but there was
+some gold mixed with all this dross. Such was his
+declaration that Councils had hitherto been useful only
+for people of unsound faith, who did not chose to
+believe the Pope's <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ipse dixit</foreign>, which every good Christian
+had always believed. But now <q>quid credendum sit
+unice ab arbitrio Pontificis in posterum dependebit.</q>
+On this a well-known Hungarian Bishop could not
+refrain from observing to his neighbour, <q>Si etiam infallibilitas
+Pontificis contenta esset in Sacrâ Scripturâ
+<pb n='806'/><anchor id='Pg806'/>
+magis compromitti non posset quam hoc levissimo ac
+ineptissimo sermone, quo auditores ex integro jam
+lassos ad vomitum movit et martyres reddidit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An amusing scene occurred at the close of this sitting,
+the last attended by the Bishops of the minority. A
+printed address was read out and distributed to the
+Fathers, in which the Legates complained in the strongest
+language of certain works describing the course of the
+Council. Two were named and characterized as <q>calumnious,</q>
+both published at Paris. The one, by Gaillard,
+was <hi rend='italic'>Ce qui se passe au Concile</hi>; the other was by a man
+distinguished alike for intellect, eloquence and learning,
+a member of the Council, who has had almost unique
+opportunities of seeing through the whole business. It
+is the work I have before mentioned, <hi rend='italic'>La Dernière Heure
+du Concile</hi>, in which the personal intervention of the
+Pope and the pressure brought to bear by him are
+forcibly depicted in strict accordance with truth. This
+pamphlet had already created a great sensation, and
+when the Legates called on the Bishops to join them in
+condemning it, the Italians and Spaniards, who&mdash;being
+for the most part ignorant of French&mdash;had not read it,
+immediately shouted out <q>Nos condemnamus.</q> <q>We do
+not,</q> cried the Bishops of the minority. Two copies of
+<pb n='807'/><anchor id='Pg807'/>
+the address were then handed to each of them, one of
+which they were ordered to return with their names
+subscribed. The result was not successful; Haynald
+told the Legates, in the name of the Hungarian Bishops,
+that they had better first translate <foreign rend='italic'>La Dernière Heure</foreign>
+into Latin, and then he and his colleagues would see
+whether it was really as bad as the Cardinals maintained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the Bishops from South and Central Italy who
+could be whipped up, or who had previously obtained
+leave of absence on account of illness or age, were peremptorily
+recalled for the Solemn Session of July 18.
+Of the Cardinals, Hohenlohe was absent. The rest appeared,
+including Antonelli, but only three, Patrizzi,
+Bonaparte and Pambianco, threw a certain spontaneity
+and energy of voice and manner into their <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> by
+standing up to deliver it. Guidi was the one most
+observed; he sat there with an oppressed and abstracted
+air, and his scarcely audible <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> escaped with difficulty
+from his lips. The two negative voters were
+Bishops Riccio of Cajazzo and Fitzgerald of Little Rock.
+When the Monsignore who was repeating the names
+and votes had credited one of them with a <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Placet</foreign> out
+of his own head, the Bishop shouted in a stentorian
+voice, <q>No; <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Non placet</foreign>!</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='808'/><anchor id='Pg808'/>
+
+<p>
+As all the Bishops of the Opposition but two stayed
+away, and an <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>abest</foreign> was the answer to every name of
+the slightest note that was called, the Holy Ghost had
+no opportunity for working a miracle of conversion,
+and all went prosaically and smoothly as the wheels of a
+watch, without any sensation. Each of the stipendiaries
+has discharged his obligation, and the Pope and Monsignori
+find that the Council has cost large sums, but
+think the money is well spent and will bring in abundant
+interest. The most remarkable case of desertion
+was that of Bishop Landriot of Rheims. Not one of the
+Bishops had been so open-mouthed, or had announced
+his fallibilist opinions with such copious flow of words
+to everybody he came across. He now says, like
+Talleyrand, that he has only deserted before the rest.
+Clerical Rome, so far as I can yet make out, is not in
+any very exalted state of enthusiasm; that is prevented
+by the political conjunctures, which give Antonelli and
+Berardi a good deal to think about. De Banneville
+has indeed given the most consoling assurances to Antonelli;
+the 5000 French troops at Civita Vecchia, who
+had received orders to hold themselves ready for recall
+to France, are to be at once replaced by 5000 more&mdash;recruits
+it is believed. Paris wishes just now to be on
+<pb n='809'/><anchor id='Pg809'/>
+the best terms with Rome, who may well prove a useful
+ally in what the <hi rend='italic'>Monde</hi> has already designated a
+religious war against Protestantism. Meanwhile they
+are pleased at the Vatican to have erected their <foreign rend='italic'>rocher
+de bronze</foreign> beforehand. The Bishops have&mdash;ostensibly
+of their own free will&mdash;abdicated in favour of the monarch,
+to receive back from him so many rights and
+commissions as he may think good to delegate to them.
+The revolution in the Church is accomplished <q>to enrich
+<emph>one</emph> among all.</q> Pius himself is more than content;
+his supreme desire, the crown of his life and
+work, is attained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the voting and promulgation a storm burst
+over Rome, and made the Council Hall so dark that
+the Pope could not read the decree of his infallibility
+without having a candle brought. It was read to an
+accompaniment of thunder and lightning. Some of
+the Bishops said that heaven thereby signified its
+condemnation of Gallicanism, while others thought
+Pius was receiving a divine attestation, as the new
+Moses who proclaimed the Law of God, like the old
+one, amid thunder and lightning. It is remarkable
+that the days of the opening and closing of this Council
+were the two darkest and most depressing Rome has
+<pb n='810'/><anchor id='Pg810'/>
+witnessed during the eight months of its session. It
+rained without intermission, so that the promised illumination
+was partly given up and partly proved a
+lamentable failure. There were few but monks, nuns
+and Zouaves, during the session in the very empty-looking
+church. When the Pope at last proclaimed
+himself the infallible and absolute ruler of all the
+baptized <q>with the approbation of the holy Council,</q>
+some bravos shouted, several persons clapped, and the
+nuns cried in tones of tender rapture, <q>Papa mio!</q>
+That was the only semblance of a demonstration. If
+any spark of enthusiasm really glimmered in the souls
+of the Romans, it was quenched by the downpour of
+rain. The keen-witted Roman, who is accustomed to
+speak of this Pope with a certain good-humoured irony,
+as a sort of comic personality, thinks there is no harm
+in gratifying the wish of the old man who has set his
+heart on this infallibility; that will hurt nobody.
+All the most important members of the diplomatic
+bodies stayed away, in obedience to the instructions of
+their governments. Neither the ambassadors of Austria,
+France, Prussia or Bavaria were present. The Belgian
+and Dutch consuls and an agent of some South American
+Republic attended. The decrees of July 18, establishing
+<pb n='811'/><anchor id='Pg811'/>
+under anathema the two new dogmas, are the
+following:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>(<hi rend='italic'>a.</hi>) Si quis itaque dixerit, Romanum Pontificem
+habere tantummodo officium inspectionis vel directionis,
+non autem plenam et supremam potestatem jurisdictionis
+in universam Ecclesiam, non solum in rebus,
+quæ ad fidem et mores, sed etiam quæ ad disciplinam
+et regimen Ecclesiæ per totum orbem diffusæ pertinent;
+aut eum habere tantum potiores partes, non
+vero totam plenitudinem hujus supremæ potestatis,
+aut hanc ejus potestatem non esse ordinariam et immediatam
+sive in omnes ac singulas Ecclesias sive in
+omnes et singulos Pastores et fideles&mdash;anathema sit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>(<hi rend='italic'>b.</hi>) Sacro approbante Concilio docemus et divinitus
+revelatum dogma esse definimus: Romanum Pontificem,
+cum ex cathedrâ loquitur, id est, cum omnium Christianorum
+Pastoris et Doctoris munere fungens, pro
+supremâ suâ apostolicâ auctoritate doctrinam de fide
+vel moribus ab universâ Ecclesiâ tenendam definit,
+per assistentiam divinam, ipsi in beato Petro promissam,
+eâ infallibilitate pollere, quâ divinus Redemptor
+Ecclesiam suam in definiendâ doctrinâ de fide vel
+moribus instructam esse voluit; ideoque ejusmodo
+<emph>Romani Pontificis definitiones esse ex sese, non autem
+<pb n='812'/><anchor id='Pg812'/>
+ex consensu Ecclesiæ irreformabiles</emph>. Si quis autem huic
+Nostræ definitioni contradicere, quod Deus avertat,
+præsumpserit&mdash;anathema sit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the work against infallibility circulated here by
+the Bishop of Mayence occurs the following passage:
+<q>Will it not seem to all nations that the authority of
+all Bishops is suppressed and sentenced to death, only
+in order to erect on such vast and manifold ruins the
+unlimited authority of the one Roman Pope?</q> When
+these lines were written, the Bishop and his theologian
+had no notion, or at least no knowledge, of the third
+anathema of the third chapter, which was afterwards
+made still more rigorous. They were only thinking of
+infallibility, but what would they have said, had they
+known that the Bishops would be required to subscribe
+to the abolition of the episcopate and the transference
+of all conceivable ecclesiastical powers and rights over
+the 180 million of Catholics in principle and in detail to
+the Pope alone, as a new article of faith imposed under
+anathema? And yet this is what happened on the
+13th and 18th July 1870. That the ordinary and immediate
+jurisdiction of the Bishops still survives, is
+indeed affirmed in the decree, but the affirmation is
+contrary to fact. It would be in inevitable collision
+<pb n='813'/><anchor id='Pg813'/>
+with the constantly encroaching jurisdiction of the
+Pope; the earthen vessel dashed against the iron.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Jewish general and historian, Josephus, relates
+how he was shut up with forty companions in the
+valley of Jehoshaphat, and summoned to surrender by
+the Romans. They resolved to die first. The Bishops
+are not offered this alternative, but threatened with
+both at once. They are bidden to submit and then
+kill themselves, to subscribe the decree of the majority,
+and thereby sign the sentence which degrades
+and annihilates them, under pain of incurring anathema.
+That is the demand. The situation is an
+unprecedented one. And what of the 532 real or
+titular Bishops who have made the 13th and 18th July
+<q>dies nefasti</q> for the Church, and renounced so many
+rights and duties for themselves and their successors,
+like a cast-off garment? Perhaps it lightens their
+hearts and is a pleasant feeling to them to be able to
+say, <q>Thank God, I need not trouble myself any more
+about doctrine, tradition, or dogma; henceforth the one
+infallible oracle in the Vatican will attend to all that, and
+he again will devolve the burden on the lusty shoulders
+of the Jesuits, as he has done before. And how sweet
+and convenient it is to be a mere executor of papal
+<pb n='814'/><anchor id='Pg814'/>
+decrees, while one's episcopal income remains untouched,
+and to be able to cover one's-self with the Medusa
+shield of a papal order in every difficulty, and every
+conflict with clergy, people or governments!</q> I heard
+a Bishop of this party say the other day, <q>Now first
+begin the golden days of the episcopate.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is reported that on the very day after the promulgation
+several Bishops experienced a certain reaction
+of sobriety, a feeling like what German students
+are wont to attribute to cats, and inquired of the high
+dogma-fabricating parties, the Legates and some members
+of the Deputation, whether they were really bound
+to believe, confess and teach all that is contained
+in the Syllabus, the Bull <hi rend='italic'>Unam Sanctam</hi>, etc., as <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>,
+the subjection of the secular powers to the Pope, the
+Church's power of inflicting bodily punishment with
+Pius who reigns gloriously, the burning of heretics
+with Leo <hi rend='smallcaps'>x.</hi>, <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>et id genus omne</foreign>. They are said to have
+been answered with a well-known Roman proverb,
+<q>Toto devorato bove, turpe est in caudâ deficere</q>&mdash;<q>You
+have swallowed the whole ox of papal infallibility,
+and the last Spanish addition with it, and you
+need not strain at the tail, <hi rend='italic'>i.e.</hi>, the consequences; that
+indeed is the best part of this ox.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='815'/><anchor id='Pg815'/>
+
+<p>
+The Bishops of the minority agreed before leaving
+Rome that they would none of them act alone and
+independently, in such further steps as would have to
+be taken concerning the decrees of the majority, but
+would all continue to correspond and act in concert.
+Meanwhile the Council has not been prorogued, but
+leave of absence is given to Bishops who can allege
+urgent reasons up to November 15. Perhaps in the
+interval the builders of the new Jesuit-Papal Zion,
+who stay behind, will prepare many a surprise for the
+Catholic world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Future historians will begin a new period of Church
+history with July 18, 1870, as with October 31, 1517.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Are we really at the end of the drama? It appears
+so. On the same spot where, 1856 years ago, the first
+monarch of the world, Augustus, bade the attendants on
+his death-bed clap their hands in token of the rôle
+being well played out to the end, the Roman courtiers
+on July 18 have saluted by clapping of hands the first
+man proclaimed infallible monarch of the world by 532
+spiritual satraps. The eight months' campaign has
+terminated in the preliminary closing act of July 18;
+the absolute Papacy celebrates its financially dear-bought,
+but otherwise easily obtained, triumph over
+<pb n='816'/><anchor id='Pg816'/>
+the Church, which now lies defenceless at the feet
+of the Italians. It only remains to follow up the
+anathematized enemy, the Bishops of the minority, into
+their lurking-places, and compel each man of them to
+bend under the Caudine yoke amid the scornful laughter
+of his colleagues of the majority. Anathemas, the
+<q>ultima ratio</q> of Rome, have already been discharged
+at the fugitives, and every such shot of the Infallible
+is itself infallible.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='819'/><anchor id='Pg819'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Appendix I.</head>
+
+<quote rend='display'>
+<p>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Speech of Darboy, Archbishop of Paris, delivered
+May 20, on the</hi> <hi rend='italic'>Constitutio Dogmatica de Ecclesiâ</hi>.
+</p>
+</quote>
+
+<p>
+There seem to me to be three points to be considered
+in reference to this <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>: its origin, its contents
+and scope, and its practical results.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And first as regards its origin and presentation to the
+Council at this time, it is enough to mention two facts,
+from which it may be judged whether the affair has
+been conducted regularly and in accordance with the
+dignity and rights of this venerable assembly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is certain that the fourth chapter, dealing with
+the infallibility of the Pope, is the turning-point of the
+whole <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>. For whatever is brought forward in
+the former chapters about the power and origin of the
+primacy in Peter and its continuance in the Popes,
+about which there is no difference among us,&mdash;and
+certainly in the first and second chapters this seems to
+exceed the right measure&mdash;is unmistakeably connected
+with the infallibility in the fourth chapter. So entirely
+is this infallibility the grand object of the Vatican
+Council, that some have indiscreetly asserted it is
+in a sense the sole object. And with reason, for the
+<pb n='820'/><anchor id='Pg820'/>
+fabrication of such a dogma must always remain the
+weightiest act of an Œcumenical Council; and moreover
+the other questions to be dealt with are either of
+far less importance, or have long since been settled and
+only require revision, as, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, questions about the being
+and attributes of God, the reality and need of revelation,
+the duty of faith, and the relation of faith to
+reason. Yet this serious question of infallibility was
+neither indicated in the Bull convoking the Council nor
+in the other public announcements referring to it, and
+with good reason, because on the one hand the
+Catholic world had no desire for a settlement of this
+question, nor was there any other ground producible for
+meddling with what had always hitherto been a subject
+of free inquiry among theologians, and on the other
+hand there are many and grave evils, partly endangering
+the salvation of souls, which the Pope out of his care
+and affection has thought it more needful to deal with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is certain that the first stirring of this question
+came from without, from religious and secular journalists,
+and that too in an impertinent manner, against all
+ecclesiastical and traditional precedent and all rules of
+hierarchical order and usage, by seeking to put a pressure
+on the conscience of the Bishops through demagogic
+agitation, and to intimidate them with the
+prospect of intrigues in their dioceses which would
+make the government of them impossible. Nay, matters
+have come to such a pass that the Fathers of the
+Council, however piously and courageously they may
+be simply following their conscience, are accused of
+<pb n='821'/><anchor id='Pg821'/>
+having paid an improper deference to party opinion, by
+promoting the introduction of the infallibility question
+in consequence of these violent agitations, and all of us
+appear to have lost something of dignity and freedom
+through the tumult raised before the doors of the Council-chamber.
+And such a judgment, which is in the
+highest degree mischievous and injurious to our honour,
+can hardly be endured without damage and disgrace to
+this venerable assembly, an assembly which must act
+independently and not under pressure from without,
+which must not only be, but appear to be, free.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is further certain that the question brought before
+us to-day has been introduced against the natural and
+logical order of the subjects in hand, and thereby the
+cause itself is prejudiced. The rest of the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de
+Fide</hi> ought first to have been submitted to our consideration,
+on which we have already debated and have the
+arguments of both sides so fresh in our memory that the
+final discussion would have been all the easier. Then
+again the <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Ecclesiâ</hi> begins quite incorrectly
+with the primacy. Neither its first compilers nor any
+theologians before now were of opinion that the treatise
+on the Church should begin with that. And furthermore,
+our studies have been directed to the questions
+intended to come on for consideration according to the
+order originally announced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And lastly, it is certain that the precipitate introduction
+of the question of infallibility by reversing the
+original order has contributed to the injury rather than
+the honour of the Holy See. For as, according to the
+<pb n='822'/><anchor id='Pg822'/>
+Bull <hi rend='italic'>Multiplices inter</hi>, motions are to be sent in to a
+special Congregation, which then reports to the Pope,
+who either accepts or rejects its decisions, it follows
+that the authors of this motion have compelled the
+Holy Father to make a decision in his own case and in
+reference to a personal prerogative, and have thereby&mdash;no
+doubt unintentionally&mdash;failed to show a fitting regard
+for his high position, if they have not rather
+directly injured it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If I am right on all these points&mdash;and such appears
+to be the case&mdash;it is impossible to discuss and decide
+upon the question of infallibility, thus originating and
+thus introduced, without paving the way for the insults
+of unbelievers and the reproaches which threaten the
+moral authority of this Council. And this should the
+more carefully be avoided, because writings and reports
+directed against the power and legitimacy of the Council
+are already current and widely circulated, so that it
+seems more likely to sow the seeds of contradiction and
+disunion among Christians than to quiet men's minds
+and lead to peace. If I may venture to add a practical
+remark to this portion of my speech, I should say that
+some have with good reason declared this question to be
+inopportune, and that there would be equally good reason
+for abstaining from any decision, even if the discussion
+of it were opportune.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the contents and tendency of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> I shall
+make only a few observations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> does not deal with the infallibility of the
+Church, which we all believe, and which has been
+<pb n='823'/><anchor id='Pg823'/>
+proved for twenty centuries, but lays down as an article
+of faith that the Pope is, alone and of himself, infallible,
+and that he possesses this privilege of inerrancy in all
+matters to which the infallibility of the Church herself
+extends. It must be well understood that the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>
+does not refer to that universally admitted infallibility,
+which is the invincible and inviolable strength of dogmatic
+decrees and decisions binding alike on all the
+faithful and all their pastors, and which reposes wholly
+and solely on the agreement of the Bishops in union with
+the Pope, but that it refers&mdash;though this is not expressly
+stated&mdash;to the personal, absolute and exclusive infallibility
+of the Pope. On the former kind of infallibility&mdash;that
+of the Church&mdash;complete harmony prevails
+among us, and there is therefore no ground for any
+discussion, whence it follows that it is the second kind
+of infallibility which is in question here. To deny this
+would be to disguise and distort the doctrine and spirit
+of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>. And moreover, the Pope's personal infallibility
+is not maintained there as a mere opinion or
+commendable doctrine, but as a dogma of faith. Hitherto
+the opportuneness and admissibility of entertaining this
+question has been disputed at the Council; that dispute
+is now closed by the Pope's decision that the matter can
+no longer be passed over in silence, and we have now to
+consider whether it is or is not opportune to declare the
+personal infallibility of the Pope a dogma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To deal rightly with this subject and come to a decision,
+it is requisite that the formula or definition of
+the doctrine should be laid before us, that it should be
+<pb n='824'/><anchor id='Pg824'/>
+proved by sure and unquestionable evidence, and finally,
+that it should be accepted with moral unanimity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is the greatest difficulty in fixing the form or
+definition of the doctrine, as is shown by the example of
+those who first composed and then revised the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>,
+and who seem to have expended much&mdash;perhaps fruitless&mdash;labour
+upon it; for they indulge in ambiguous
+expressions which open the door to endless controversies.
+What is meant by <q>exercising the office of the
+supreme teacher of Christendom</q>? What are the external
+conditions of its exercise? When is it certain
+that the Pope has exercised it? The compilers of the
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> think of course that this is as clear as, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, the
+œcumenicity of a Council. But they thereby contradict
+themselves, for a Council is only then held œcumenical
+by the body of the faithful scattered over the world
+when the Bishops are morally unanimous, and therefore
+infallibility would still depend on the consent of the
+episcopate if the same principle is to be applied to papal
+decrees. The authors of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> either eliminate
+this consent or they do not. In the former case they
+are introducing an innovation, and an innovation which
+is unprecedented and intolerable; in the latter case
+they are only expressing an old and universally received
+view and fighting a man of straw. But in no case can they
+pass over in silence the necessity or needlessness of the
+consent of the episcopate, for that would be to infuse
+doubts into the faithful and throw fresh difficulties in
+their way in a question of such vast importance and
+all that at present hinges on it.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='825'/><anchor id='Pg825'/>
+
+<p>
+The compilers only define the subject-matter of papal
+infallibility by saying that it is identical with the infallibility
+of the Church. But that explanation is
+inadequate until the Council has defined the infallibility
+of the Church. Hence it is clearly a logical
+fallacy to prefix the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on the Primacy to that on
+the Church. Of the infallibility of the Church we
+know that it always acts within the proper limits of
+its subject-matter, both because the common consent
+of the Bishops is necessary and because the Church
+is holy and cannot sin, while the compilers of this
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> on papal infallibility on the one hand, according
+to their own statement, exclude the consent
+of the Bishops, and on the other hand have not undertaken
+to prove that every Pope is holy and cannot
+sin.<note place='foot'>[On the essential connection between the infallibility and the impeccability
+of the Popes, see <hi rend='italic'>Janus</hi>, pp. 113 <hi rend='italic'>sqq.</hi>, and Maret, <hi rend='italic'>Du Concile Général</hi>,
+vol. ii. ch. 13.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But if a form of definition was really discovered, it
+would have to be confirmed by solid and certain proofs.
+It would have to be shown that this doctrine of personal
+infallibility is contained in holy Scripture, as it has
+been always interpreted, and in the tradition of all
+centuries, that it has the moral assent not merely of
+some but of all Fathers, Doctors, Bishops and Theologians,
+and that it is in perfect harmony with all
+decisions and acts of the General Councils, and therefore
+with the decrees of the fourth and fifth sessions of
+the Council of Constance&mdash;for even supposing they
+<pb n='826'/><anchor id='Pg826'/>
+were not œcumenical, which I do not admit, they would
+show the mind and common opinion of the theologians
+and Bishops.<note place='foot'>[The decree of Constance defines that <q>every lawfully convoked
+Œcumenical Council representing the Church derives its authority immediately
+from Christ, and every one, the Pope included, is subject to it in
+matters of faith, in the healing of schism, and the reformation of the
+Church.</q> It was carried in full Council without a dissentient voice.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> It would further have to be proved that
+this doctrine is neither contradicted by historical facts nor
+by any acts of the Popes themselves, and lastly that it
+belongs to that class of truths which the Council and
+Pope in union can decide upon, as having been acknowledged
+for revealed truth always, everywhere and by all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this our <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> omits. But when the question is
+of defining a dogma, the Fathers must have sufficient evidence
+laid before them and time allowed them for weighing
+it. As it is, neither the original nor the revised draft of
+the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> supply such arguments as might illustrate the
+matter and clear up all doubts, and as little is sufficient
+time allowed&mdash;as is generally notorious&mdash;for unravelling
+this complicated question, solving its difficulties and
+acquiring the necessary information about it. In such
+a matter, where a burden is to be laid on the conscience
+of the faithful, a hasty decision pronounced without
+absolute certainty is dangerous, while there is no danger
+in a fuller discussion and in not deciding till it can be
+done with complete certainty of conscience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It would finally be necessary that the doctrine of
+the personal and independent infallibility of the Pope,
+after being clearly expressed and certainly proved,
+should be accepted by the Fathers with moral unanimity;
+<pb n='827'/><anchor id='Pg827'/>
+for otherwise we must fear that the definition
+would be regarded as a papal constitution and not a
+decree of a Council.<note place='foot'>[That in fact is exactly what Antonelli calls it in his circular.&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tr.</hi>]</note> It is a duty to impose a truth of
+faith on all Christians, but this difficult and sacred
+right can only be exercised by the Bishops with the
+greatest caution. And therefore the Fathers of Trent,
+as you all know, whatever sophistical objections may
+be raised, did not pass their decrees on dogmatic questions
+by numerical majorities, but with moral unanimity.
+I content myself now with referring to the perplexity
+of conscience among the faithful, which must arise from
+passing this dogma over the heads of the minority, and
+thus giving a handle for questioning the validity and
+authority of this Council.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two leading remarks may suffice on the practical
+consequences of the dogma, for the only object of bringing
+forward the personal infallibility as an article of
+faith is to make the unity of the Church more compact
+and the central authority stronger, and thus to supply
+an efficient remedy for all abuses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As regards unity and central authority, I must first
+make the general observation that they exist and must
+be preserved, not however in that shape which we may
+fancy or which approves itself to our reason, but as
+Jesus Christ our Lord ordained and as our fathers have
+maintained it. For it is no business of ours to arrange
+the Church according to our good pleasure and to alter
+the foundation of the work of God. The necessary
+unity in faith and that of the common central authority
+<pb n='828'/><anchor id='Pg828'/>
+under fatherly guidance exists and has always existed
+among Catholics, or else one would have to say that
+there had been some essential defect in the Church of
+the past, which all will certainly deny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The unity of doctrine and Church communion and
+the central authority of the Pope remain then unshaken,
+as they always flourished and flourish still without any
+dogmatic definition of infallibility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let it not be said that this unity will hereafter be
+closer when the central authority is stronger, for this
+inference is fallacious. Mere unity is not enough, but
+we must have that unity and that measure of it which
+the nature and scope of the thing, as well as the law
+and the necessity of life, demand. Else the thing itself
+might lamentably perish by being forced into too rigid
+an unity, from its inward vitality being cramped, disturbed
+and broken through the external pressure. Thus
+even in civil matters the unity of freemen, who act for
+themselves under the law, is indeed looser but more
+honourable than the unity of slaves tormented under
+an arbitrary tyranny. Permit us to retain that unity
+which belongs to us by the ordinance of Christ, and
+that means of unity&mdash;viz., the central authority of
+the Pope&mdash;which our forefathers acknowledged and
+honoured, who neither separated the Bishops from the
+Pope nor the Pope from the Bishops. Let us loyally
+hold fast to the ancient rule of faith and the statutes of
+the Fathers, and the more so since the proposed definition
+is open to many grave objections.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And again we can hardly doubt that this expedient
+<pb n='829'/><anchor id='Pg829'/>
+would be powerless for healing the evils of our time, and
+it must be feared would rather tend to the injury of many.
+The matter must not be regarded only from a theological
+standpoint, but also in its bearings on civil
+society. For we in this place are not mere head-sacristans
+or superiors of a monastery, but men called to share
+with the Pope his care for the whole Church; allow us
+therefore to take the state of the world into our prudent
+consideration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will personal and independent infallibility serve to
+rouse from their grave those perished Churches on the
+African coast, or to wake the slumbers of the East,
+which once bloomed with such flowers of intellect and
+virtue? Will it be easier for our brethren, the Vicars-Apostolic,
+to bring the heathen, Mahometans, and
+schismatics to the Catholic faith, if they preach the
+doctrine of the Pope's sole infallibility? Or will the
+proposed definition perhaps infuse spirit and strength
+into Protestants and other heretics to return to the
+Roman Church and lay aside all prejudices and hatred
+against it? And now, first, for Europe! I say it with
+pain,&mdash;the Church is everywhere under ban. She is
+excluded from those congresses where nations discuss
+war and peace, and where once the authority of the Holy
+See was so powerful, whereas now it is bidden not even
+to proclaim its views. The Church is shut out in
+several European countries from the Chambers, and if
+some prelates or clergymen here and there belong to
+them, this appears a rare occurrence. The Church is
+shut out from the school, where grievous errors advance
+<pb n='830'/><anchor id='Pg830'/>
+unchecked; from legislation, which manifests a secular
+and therefore irreligious tendency; and lastly, from the
+family, where civil marriage corrupts morals. All those
+who preside over the public affairs of Europe avoid us
+or hold us in check.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And what sort of remedy do you offer the world,
+which is diseased with so many uncertainties about the
+Church? On all those who are seeking to shake off
+from their indocile shoulders even the burdens imposed
+on them from of old and reverently accepted by their
+fathers, you would now lay a new, and therefore difficult
+and odious, burden. All those who are of weak
+faith are to be crushed by a new and inopportune
+dogma, a doctrine never hitherto defined, and which,
+without any amends being made for the injurious
+manner of its introduction, is to be defined by a Council
+of which many say that its freedom is insufficiently
+attested. And yet you hope to remedy everything by
+this definition of personal and exclusive infallibility, to
+strengthen the faith and improve the morals of all.
+Your hopes are vain. The world either remains sick
+or perishes, not from ignorance of the truth and its
+teachers, but because it avoids it and will not accept
+its guidance. But if it now rejects the truth, when
+proclaimed by the whole teaching body of the Church,
+the 800 Bishops dispersed over the world and infallible
+in union with the Pope, how much more will it do so,
+when the truth is proclaimed by one single infallible
+teacher, who has only just been declared infallible?
+For an authority to be strong and effective, it is not
+<pb n='831'/><anchor id='Pg831'/>
+enough for it to be claimed; it must also be accepted.
+And thus it is not enough to declare that the Pope is
+infallible, personally and apart from the Bishops, but
+he must be acknowledged as such by all, if his office is
+to be a reality. What is the use, <hi rend='italic'>e.g.</hi>, of an anathema,
+if the authority which pronounces it is not respected?
+The Syllabus circulated through Europe, but what evils
+could it cure even where it was received as an infallible
+oracle? There were only two large countries where
+religion ruled, not in fact but <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>de jure</foreign>&mdash;Austria and
+Spain. In both of them this Catholic order fell to the
+ground though commanded by the infallible authority;
+perhaps indeed in Austria on that very account.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let us take things as they are. Not only will the
+independent infallibility of the Pope not destroy these
+prejudices and objections which draw away so many
+from the faith, but it will increase and intensify
+them. There are many who in heart are not alienated
+from the Catholic Church, but who yet think of what
+they term a separation of Church and State. It is certain
+that several of the leaders of public opinion are on
+this side, and will take occasion from the proposed
+definition to effect their object. The example of France
+will soon be copied more or less all over Europe, and to
+the greatest injury of the clergy and the Church herself.
+The compilers of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, whether they desire
+it or not, are introducing a new era of mischief, if the
+subject-matter of papal infallibility is not accurately
+defined, or if it can be supposed that under the head of
+morals the Pope will give decisions on the civil and
+<pb n='832'/><anchor id='Pg832'/>
+political acts of sovereigns and nations, laws and rights,
+to which a public authority will be attributed.<note place='foot'>This is emphatically asserted in a sermon preached last year at Kensington
+by Archbishop Manning, where he says, speaking in the Pope's
+name, <q>I claim to be the Supreme Judge and director of the consciences
+of men; of the peasant that tills the field and the prince that sits on the
+throne; of the household that lives in the shade of privacy <emph>and the Legislature
+that makes laws for kingdoms</emph>&mdash;I am the sole last Supreme Judge
+of what is right and wrong.</q></note> Every
+one of any political cultivation knows what seeds of
+discord are contained in our <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, and to what perils
+it exposes even the temporal power of the Holy See.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To explain this more minutely in detail would take
+too long and might be indiscreet, for were I to say all,
+I might easily bring forward things it is more prudent
+to suppress. However, I have delivered my conscience,
+so far as is allowed me, and so let my words be taken
+in good part. I know well that everything in the world
+has its difficulties, and one must not always shrink from
+action because greater evil may follow. But I put the
+matter before the reverend fathers, not that they may
+instantly conform to my opinion, but in order that
+they may give a full and ripe consideration to the
+arguments of all parties. I know too that we must
+not childishly quail before public opinion, but neither
+should we obstinately resist it; it is wiser and more
+prudent often to reconcile one's-self with it, and in
+every case to take it into account. I know, lastly, that
+the Church needs no arm of flesh, yet she does not reject
+the approval and aid of civil society, and did not, I
+think, look back with regret from the time of Constantine
+<pb n='833'/><anchor id='Pg833'/>
+to the time of Nero. So much for the practical
+consequences of the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finally, my desire is (1.) that the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> should be
+deferred for a later discussion, because it has not been
+introduced into the Council in a sufficiently worthy
+manner; (2.) that it should meanwhile be revised, and
+the limits of infallibility more accurately marked out, so
+as to leave no handle for future sophistries and attacks;
+(3.) but, best of all, that the question of infallibility
+should be let drop altogether on account of its manifold
+inconveniences.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='834'/><anchor id='Pg834'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Appendix II.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Letters on the Council from French Bishops</hi>.<note place='foot'>These letters are taken from the <hi rend='italic'>Journal des Débats</hi> of May 6 and 11.
+The Bishops of Marseilles and Montpellier are said to be the writers.</note>
+</p>
+
+<div>
+<head>I.</head>
+
+<p>
+Votre judicieuse dissertation est pleine de sens et de
+la meilleure critique; mais c'est bien de cela qu'il s'agit
+aujourd'hui! On veut se tromper et tromper; le reste
+importe peu. Ce qui importe le plus, ce qui nous
+sauvera, je l'espère, mieux que toutes discussions avec
+des gens de mauvaise foi ou de parti pris, c'est d'établir
+des bases incontestables et de faire que la saine opinion
+publique soutienne les vrais intérêts de l'Église.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1. Le Gallicanisme n'est pas une doctrine, pas même
+une opinion, c'est une simple négation de prétentions
+nées au onzième siècle, et une résistance à ces prétentions,
+au nom de la tradition ancienne et constante des
+Églises. L'ultramontanisme, au contraire, est une
+doctrine, une opinion qui est venue s'entre sur le vieux
+tronc et qui a poussé des jets de croyances positives.
+Muselée au Concile de Florence, écartée au Concile de
+<pb n='835'/><anchor id='Pg835'/>
+Trente, cette opinion reparaît furieuse au Concile du
+Vatican.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+2. Le Gallicanisme est improprement nommé. Son <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>veto</foreign>
+appartient à toutes les nations Catholiques. L'Espagne
+en soutenait la force antique, Saint François de Sales en
+vengeait les droits au nom des privileges de la maison
+de Savoie, et aujourd'hui, nous autres Français, nous
+l'avons trouvé faible chez nous, en comparaison de sa
+vitalité en Allemagne, en Autriche, en Hongrie, en
+Portugal, en Amérique, et jusqu'au fond de l'Orient.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+3. Notre faiblesse, en ce moment, ne vient ni des
+Écritures, ni de la tradition des Pères, ni des monumens
+des Conciles Généraux et de l'histoire. Elle vient
+de notre défaut de liberté, qui est radical. Une minorité
+imposante qui représente la foi de plus de 100
+millions de Catholiques, c'est-à-dire de presque la moitié
+de l'Eglise universelle, est écrasée par le joug imposé de
+règlemens restrictifs et contraires aux traditions conciliaires.
+Par des députations que nous n'avons pas
+réellement choisies et qui osent introduire dans le texte
+discuté des paragraphes non discutés, par une commission
+pour les interpellations imposée par l'autorité;
+par le défaut absolu de discussion, réplique, objection,
+interpellation; par des journaux que l'on encourage
+pour la traquer, pour soulever contre elle le clergé des
+diocèses; par les nonciatures qui viennent à la rescousse,
+quand les journaux ne suffisent pas pour tout bouleverser,
+c'est-à-dire pour ériger en témoins de la foi les
+prêtres contre les évêques, et ne plus laisser à ces juges
+divins que le rôle de députés du clergé secondaire avec
+<pb n='836'/><anchor id='Pg836'/>
+mandat impératif, et blâme si on ne répond pas au
+mandat. La minorité est écrasée surtout par tout le
+poids de la suprême autorité qui fait peser sur elle les
+éloges et encouragemens qu'elle adresse, <emph>par brefs</emph>, aux
+prêtres, et par toutes les manifestations à Dom Guéranger
+contre M. de Montalembert et autres.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+4. La majorité n'est pas libre; car elle se produit par
+un appoint considérable de prélats qui ne sauraient
+être témoins de la foi d'Églises naissantes ou mourantes.
+Or, cet appoint, qui se compose du chiffre énorme de
+tous les vicaires apostoliques, du chiffre relativement
+trop fort des évêques Italiens et des États Pontificaux,
+cet appoint n'est pas libre. C'est une armée toute faite,
+toute acquise, endoctrinée, enrégimentée, disciplinée,
+que l'on menace, si elle bronche, de la famine ou de la
+<emph>disponibilité</emph>, et l'on a été jusqu'à donner de l'argent pour
+ramener quelques transfuges. Donc, il est évident qu'il
+n'y a pas de liberté suffisante.&mdash;La conclusion ultérieure
+est qu'il n'y a pas <emph>œcuménicité nette et plausible</emph>. Et
+ceci n'infirme en rien les vrais principes: l'Église est et
+reste infaillible dans les Conciles Généraux; seulement
+il faut que les conciles présentent tous les caractères
+d'œcuménicité; convocation légitime, liberté pleine
+pour les jugemens, confirmation par le Pape. Si une
+seule de ces conditions manque, tout peut être révoqué
+en doute. On a eu le Brigandage d'Ephèse, ce qui n'a
+pas empêché d'avoir eu ensuite un vrai Concile de ce
+nom. On pourrait avoir <hi rend='italic'>Ludibrium Vaticanum</hi>; ce qui
+n'empêcherait pas de tout réparer dans de nouvelles et
+sérieuses assises....
+</p>
+
+<pb n='837'/><anchor id='Pg837'/>
+
+<p>
+Vous pourrez répandre ces réflexions, je crois que le
+grand remède aujourd'hui nous doit venir du dehors ...
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<head>II.</head>
+
+<p>
+Je n'ai point parle une seule fois, je ne parlerai pas
+davantage dans la suite. Je n'aime ni les gens qui
+posent, ni les choses complétement inutiles. <emph>J'agis</emph>
+depuis quatre mois, et je crois avoir rendu quelques
+services par ce moyen qui en dépit de toutes les
+entraves, nous a donné trois représentations, une commission
+internationale, des commissions de nations et
+137 signataires<note place='foot'>Lire: spartiates.</note> qui succomberont avec honneur et
+horions, si l'on continue à nous traiter aussi mal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Je crois inutiles tous efforts pour résister à l'aveuglement
+de l'orgueil moyen-âge, toutes Notes diplomatiques,
+toutes menaces qui ne sauraient aboutir, et dont je
+déplorerais le premier l'exécution, si elle était possible.
+Le remède n'est pas là; on se jouera de tout, et on ira
+triomphalement aux abîmes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quand on a affaire à des gens qui ne craignent
+qu'une chose, il faut se servir de cette chose,&mdash;c'est-à-dire
+de l'opinion publique.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Il faut par ce moyen établir ce qui est vrai&mdash;point
+d'autorité parceque point de liberté. Le défaut de
+liberté. Le défaut de liberté, gros comme des montagnes,
+crève les yeux; il repose sur des faits notoires,
+appréciables pour tous, et sa constatation publique est
+la seule planche de salut dans la tourmente inouïe que
+subit l'Église.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='838'/><anchor id='Pg838'/>
+
+<p>
+A notre arrivée, tout était fait sans nous. Toutes les
+mailles du réseau étaient serrées, et les jésuites qui out
+monté le traquenard ne doutaient pas un instant que
+nous y serions pris. Ils voulaient nous faire poser par
+enchantement la pierre angulaire de leur fronton, et se
+seraient charges ensuite, sans nous, de bâtir le portail de
+leur édifice en un clin d'œil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nous avons donc trouvé un règlement tout fait,&mdash;c'est-à-dire
+des menottes. Pour faire droit à nos
+plaintes, on a serré de plus belle, et nous jouissons de
+l'ancien brodequin que Louis <hi rend='smallcaps'>xvi.</hi> a supprimé. Pour
+être vrai, il faut dire que les tourmenteurs out fait la
+chose avec toute la grâce imaginable. Nous avons
+trouvé une majorité toute faite, très compacte, plus que
+suffisante en nombre, parfaitement disciplinée et qui a
+reçu au besoin instructions, injonctions, menaces, prison,
+argent. Le système des candidatures officielles est distancé
+de 100 kilomètres.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Une commission, la plus utile, celle où l'on peut
+adresser ses réclamations, a été créée et imposée d'office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mais il faut dire à sa louange qu'elle ne fonctionne
+pas, parce qu'elle ne répond jamais ou qu'elle ne repond
+qu'aux membres de la majorité. Nous avons été libres
+de nommer les autres commissions, c'est-à-dire que la
+majorité fictive a pu les créer à l'aide de listes dressées
+et lithographiées.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Restait la parole; mais à quelles conditions? Défense
+de répliquer un mot, de discuter, d'éclairer. Si on voulait
+parler, il fallait se faire inscrire, et le lendemain, ou
+deux jours après, quand tout était refroidi, on pouvait
+<pb n='839'/><anchor id='Pg839'/>
+venir ennuyer l'assemblée par un discours. Défense
+alors de sortir du thème donné aux écoliers (excepté
+pour MM. de la majorité) et quand on a tenté de parler
+de liberté, de règlement, de commission, d'acoustique, de
+décentralisation, de désitalianisation, on a vu se produire
+les scènes tumultueuses qui ont démoli les Cardinaux
+Rauscher et Schwarzenberg, les Évêques de Colocza, de
+Bosnie, d'Halifax, tandis qu'on trouvait bon que
+Moulins, Belley et d'autres introduisissent de force la
+grande question à propos de la vie des clercs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+La pauvre petite minorité est en butte aux injures,
+aux calomnies, et traquée par la <hi rend='italic'>Civiltà</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>l'Univers</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>le
+Monde</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>l'Union</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>l'Osservatore</hi> et <hi rend='italic'>la Correspondance de
+Rome</hi>. Ces journaux sont autorisés et encouragés. Ils
+soulèvent contre nous le clergé de nos diocèses, et ce
+clergé applaudi. Un de nous a osé écrire contre son
+collègue, est il n'a pas reçu un blâme officiel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mais voici ce qui achève d'opprimer notre liberté:
+elle est écrasée de tout le poids du respect que nous
+portons à notre chef.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+La question est pendante; elle n'est pas même à
+l'ordre du jour, les juges de droit divin sont réunis et
+attendent pour la traiter. Or, en pleines assises, le chef
+se sert de sa haute et divine autorité pour blâmer
+devant les prêtres qui lui sont présentés <emph>leurs</emph> évêques
+<emph>mineurs</emph>. Il fait l'éloge funèbre de M. de Montalembert
+devant 400 personnes; il écrit à Dom Guéranger, à
+l'Abbé de Cabrières de Nîmes, qui s'est dressé devant
+l'Évêque d'Orléans, aux diocèses dont les prêtres font
+des Adresses pour forcer la main à <emph>leurs mandataires</emph>;
+<pb n='840'/><anchor id='Pg840'/>
+et il fait tout cela en termes tels que <hi rend='italic'>la Gazette du Midi</hi>
+et <foreign lang='it' rend='italic'>tutti quanti</foreign> déclarent qu'il n'est plus permis ni aux
+évêques ni à personne de soutenir le contraire; et on
+appelle cela de la liberté!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On nous menace de passer par-dessus une minorité
+imposante, contrairement à toute la tradition, de fouler
+aux pieds la règle suprême de saint Vincent de Lerins:
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Quod ubique, quod semper, quod ab omnibus</foreign>. On prêche
+que l'unanimité morale n'est pas nécessaire, que le chef
+est maître de tout, et que nous devons rendre des services
+et non point des sentences, faire de l'affection
+quand il s'agit de la foi. Voilà notre liberté! Un
+Cardinal me disait pour conclusion: <q>Mon cher, nous
+allons aux abîmes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tout cela est capable d'ébranler les faibles, de désagréger
+ce qui tient à si peu.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Je crois vous avoir peint la position ce qu'elle est.
+Priez pour nous, faites valoir la chose, parce qu'elle est
+<emph>vraie</emph>, parce que je crois servir l'Eglise en vous la
+révélant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Après mes souffrances de cet hiver, je ne pense pas
+pouvoir affronter les chaleurs.... D'ailleurs, Dieu seul
+peut nous sauver.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='841'/><anchor id='Pg841'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Appendix III.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Difficultés de la Situation a Rome.</hi><note place='foot'>From the <hi rend='italic'>Gazette de France</hi> of June 28. The Vicar-General of an
+eminent French Bishop, who had been at Rome, is the reputed author.</note>
+</p>
+
+<div>
+<head>I.</head>
+
+<p>
+La question de l'infaillibilité pontificale, devenue,
+contre l'attente universelle, l'objet capital du Concile du
+Vatican depuis son ouverture, ne semble pas toucher
+encore à une solution immédiate. Cette grave question
+qui devait, au dire de certains hommes, être définie par
+acclamation dès les premières séances du Concile, puis
+le jour de l'Epiphanie, puis, après de courts débats, pour
+la fête de Saint Joseph ou le 25 Mars jour de l'Annonciation;
+différée de jour en jour à raison des énormes
+difficultés qu'elle rencontre, à la grande surprise des
+partisans de l'infaillibilité, doit enfin, nous dit-on, être,
+sans nouveau délai, résolue solennellement le 29 Juin,
+jour de la fête du Prince des Apôtres. Si telle est
+véritablement la pensée des Présidents du Concile, il
+semble difficile qu'elle puisse se réaliser. Quelques
+jours seulement nous séparent de cette solennité, et
+près de cent orateurs sont inscrits pour traiter cette
+question devant le Concile. Dans cette situation, il
+faut qu'on choisisse entre trois partis: ou supprimer
+<pb n='842'/><anchor id='Pg842'/>
+toute discussion, ou proroger le Concile, ou exiger qu'il
+poursuive ses travaux jusqu'à ce qu'enfin toutes les
+difficultés soient pleinement éclaircies, et que tous les
+Pères puissent donner leur suffrage en parfaite connaissance
+de cause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Supprimer, ou du moins restreindre la discussion de
+telle sorte que la conscience d'un nombre considérable
+de Pères qui sentent vivement toute la gravité de la
+question et les difficultés de tout genre dont elle est
+hérissée, ne soit pas pleinement satisfaite, ce serait
+violer toutes les règles des délibérations conciliares que
+nous voyons de siècle en siècle pratiquées avec la
+liberté et la maturité la plus complète. Rien ne saurait
+dispenser d'un examen approfondi, lorsqu'il s'agit d'imposer
+un dogme nouveau à la croyance des fidèles; et,
+au dire des théologiens, toute définition rendue sans
+une discussion préalable qui porte jusqu'à l'évidence le
+caractère de doctrine révélée dans le point mis en délibération,
+demeure par cela même frappée de nullité.
+Il suffit de parcourir rapidement les actes des Conciles
+Œcuméniques pour se convaincre des patientes recherches,
+de la sage lenteur qu'ils out apportées à leurs
+délibérations; et il est incontestable que les questions
+à résoudre dans ces grandes assemblées étaient loin de
+présenter les difficultés qui se rencontrent dans celle
+qui s'agite en ce moment. Le monde Chrétien n'ignore
+pas cela, et il ne verrait pas d'un œil indifférent un
+jugement solennel, en une matière qui touche à la
+constitution même de l'Eglise, prononcé à la hâte et
+par un coup de majorité.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='843'/><anchor id='Pg843'/>
+
+<p>
+Sans doute ceux qui tiennent dans leurs mains la
+direction du Concile, se persuadent que la question est
+depuis longtemps assez discutée pour qu'on sache à
+quoi s'en tenir sans de plus amples recherches; et,
+parce qu'à leurs yeux l'infaillibilité du Pape est une
+vérité, ils regardent toute nouvelle discussion comme
+une pure formalité que rien ne commande impérieusement.
+Mais par cela même que la question est discutée
+depuis plusieurs siècles, et que l'on discute encore avec
+science, érudition et bonne foi, il faut conclure évidemment
+que la lumière n'est pas encore faite à ce point
+qu'on puisse dire que telle est incontestablement la
+tradition antique et universelle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Si à leurs yeux l'infaillibilité du Pape est une vérité
+certainement révélée, et qu'ils tiennent à précipiter la
+définition par égard pour certaines impatiences, ils ont
+un moyen bien simple de les satisfaire, sans commettre
+une violation des lois conciliaires. Dans le système ultramontain,
+le Pape étant infaillible, et, du consentement
+de tous les catholiques, l'Église universelle ne pouvant
+jamais accepter l'erreur et y adhérer, toute définition <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>ex
+cathedrâ</foreign> sera immanquablement suivie de l'assentiment
+de tout le corps de l'Église. Pie <hi rend='smallcaps'>ix</hi>., assure-t-on, est profondément
+convaincu de son infaillibilité comme Pontife
+suprême. Eh bien! de deux choses l'une: ou il faut
+que le concile agisse en concile, et par conséquent avec
+circonspection, pesant avec une attention scrupuleuse
+les raisons graves, les faits, les textes allégués de part
+et d'autre; ou le Pape, en vertu de son autorité apostolique,
+par un acte des plus solennels, doit trancher
+<pb n='844'/><anchor id='Pg844'/>
+toutes les difficultés et définir lui-même le dogme de
+cette infaillibilité qu'il croit être un apanage essentiel
+de la dignité suprême dont il est revêtu. Pourquoi ne
+pas tenter cette expérience? Si l'Église adhère à sa
+décision, son infaillibilité est très canoniquement établie:
+si elle n'adhère pas, il est évident qu'il ne peut prétendre
+à ce privilège. La question est alors définitivement
+établie, et toute dispute cesse. Jusqu'ici, aucune
+décision nette, précise et solennelle sur ce point n'a été
+donnée; hésiter sur l'emploi de ce moyen, ne serait-ce
+pas douter de cette infaillibilité? Et si, en l'écartant
+on veut que le Concile prenne lui-même la responsabilité
+d'une définition dogmatique, il est alors de toute convenance,
+de toute justice, de toute nécessité qu'il ne
+prononce qu'après l'examen le plus approfondi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+L'état des esprits dans le Concile et hors du Concile,
+les discours prononcés, les écrits nombreux publiés de
+part et d'autre, prouvent évidemment, aux yeux de
+quiconque juge sans parti pris et avec une parfaite impartialité,
+que la question, depuis 1682, pour ne pas
+remonter plus haut, n'a pas encore fait un seul pas;
+elle en est toujours au même point. L'étude la plus
+attentive de la Tradition n'a pas donné de nouvelles
+lumières à ceux qui sont capables de ces études, et sans
+doute l'état de la question dans cette sphère mérite une
+attention tout exceptionnelle, et bien différente de celle
+que prétend attirer sur soi un enthousiasme factice ou
+irréfléchi.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='845'/><anchor id='Pg845'/>
+
+<div>
+<head>II.</head>
+
+<p>
+La prorogation du Concile serait done la mesure la
+plus rationelle et la plus prudente. Mais les impatiences
+provoquées, enflammées de plus en plus par toute
+sorte de manœuvres, comment les contenir? Ces
+feuilles, ces écrits, cette propagande pieuse, qui les
+excitaient par la promesse d'une satisfaction prochaine,
+tout cela ne va-t-il pas devenir l'objet d'un mépris
+universel, pour avoir leurré si longtemps les âmes
+honnêtes et religieuses d'une espérance si lente à se
+réaliser? Mais que faire! Telle est la difficulté de la
+situation qu'on a si imprudemment créée. S'il faut que
+le Concile décide, il ne reste plus qu'à le proroger, pour
+qu'il puisse un peu plus tard reprendre ses travaux avec
+toute la patience et la liberté d'esprit qu'ils réclament:
+ou bien il faut qu'il les poursuive actuellement sans
+désemparer, jusqu'à ce qu'enfin tout soit mûr pour le
+jugement à prononcer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mais ici deux tristes réflexions se présentent à
+l'esprit. D'abord, quelle rigueur,&mdash;le mot n'est pas
+excessif, et on l'a entendu sortir de la bouche de bonnes
+femmes Romaines, au moment où les vénérables Pères
+faisaient cortège au Sauveur du monde porté en triomphe
+à la procession solennelle de la Fête-Dieu;&mdash;quelle
+rigueur ne serait-ce pas de retenir plus longtemps, dans
+cette saison de chaleurs accablantes, sous un climat que
+les Romains eux-mêmes se hâtent de fuir à cette époque
+de l'année, des vieillards épuisés par l'âge, par les infirmités,
+par les fatigues de tout genre, fatigues du corps,
+<pb n='846'/><anchor id='Pg846'/>
+fatigues de l'esprit, angoisses de l'âme en présence des
+plus terribles dangers pour leurs troupeaux particuliers,
+pour l'Église universelle, pour la société tout entière;
+des vieillards qui sentent le poids énorme de cette
+responsabilité, qui entendent tous les jours la voix de
+l'opinion publique, et la voix plus puissante et plus
+pénétrante de la religion alarmée; des vieillards, parmi
+lesquels plusieurs ont déjà succombé, plusieurs autres
+sont atteints de maladie, tous sont privés de l'air vivifiant
+du pays natal, des soins particuliers que ne sauraient
+donner des mains étrangères, des consolations qu'un
+pasteur fidèle trouve toujours au milieu d'un peuple
+qui l'aime.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Les séances en Congrégation Générale, continuées
+presque tous les jours sans interruption, durent, depuis
+huit heures et demie du matin jusqu'à une heure
+de l'après-midi. Le devoir de la prière, la récitation
+de l'office canonial, la méditation des matières à discuter,
+la préparation des discours à prononcer, rien de
+tout cela ne peut être suspendu. Des jeunes gens
+robustes ne résisteraient pas longtemps à ce travail si
+multiplié, si continu, à l'effort d'une attention soutenue
+pendant les longues heures des séances conciliaires
+sur des questions qui ne pèsent pas uniquement sur la
+pensée, mais aussi et plus encore sur la conscience, et
+enfin à l'action accablante des fortes chaleurs, dont
+l'intensité, par l'agglomeration de six cents prélats, redouble
+sans mesure dans une salle d'ailleurs extrêmement
+incommode sous tous les rapports. On entend
+les plus vigoureux de corps et d'esprit déclarer qu'ils
+<pb n='847'/><anchor id='Pg847'/>
+sont à bout de forces. Et l'on persisterait encore à
+les retenir!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mais il y aurait encore là quelque chose de plus
+grave. Retenir les évêques jusqu'à ce qu'une définition
+de l'infaillibilité pontificale ait pu être rendue
+après une discussion parfaitement libre, et aussi longue
+qu'on doit l'augurer du nombre des orateurs inscrits
+et des questions graves et nombreuses qui se rattachent
+à cette définition, c'est leur dire: évêques, il faut vous
+résoudre à mourir ou à bâcler en toute hâte un jugement
+duquel dépendent les destinées de l'Église et du
+monde. Oui, mourez, accablées par l'ennui, la fatigue,
+le climat dévorant, l'âge et les infirmités; ou, si vous
+tenez à vivre encore, foulez aux pieds les règles les
+plus sacrées des conciles, sacrifiez votre conscience, et
+avec la vôtre celle de plusieurs millions d'âmes!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sous le rapport de la liberté de discussion, bien
+des choses dans le Concile du Vatican ne ressemblent
+pas aux anciens Conciles Généraux, toujours vénérés
+dans l'Église. Au dedans, au dehors, un parti a exercé
+sur les Pères une pression toujours croissante. Au dedans,
+des règlements mal faits, des interruptions sans
+cause, dont le résultat inévitable était de décourager
+les hommes les plus fermes, et d'empêcher ou d'affaiblir
+la manifestation de la vérité; une certaine fraction
+de l'assemblée, turbulente, impétueuse, arrêtant par des
+murmures les prélats les plus vénérables dont la doctrine
+ne se pliait pas à ses idées; les présidents fermant les
+yeux sur ces faits et n'ayant de sévérités que pour les
+adversaires de l'infaillibilité; la discussion brusquement
+<pb n='848'/><anchor id='Pg848'/>
+arrêtée au gré de ceux qu'elle déconcertait. Au
+dehors, des journalistes qui ne cessaient de prodiguer
+l'insulte aux évêques contraires à leurs opinions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rome est tout émue d'un fait récent concernant
+l'un des membres les plus éminents du Concile, le Cardinal
+Guidi, Archevêque de Bologne, précédemment
+religieux Dominicain, et très célèbre professeur de théologie
+dans la capitale du monde Chrétien. Il avait
+parlé dans le Concile sur la question de l'infaillibilité,
+exigeant pour celle des définitions pontificales le concours
+de l'épiscopat. Le jour même, il est mandé et
+admonesté du ton le plus sévère. <q>Saint-Père, a répondu
+le cardinal, j'ai dit aujourd'hui ce que j'ai enseigné
+au grand jour pendant plusieurs années à votre
+collège de la Minerve, sans que jamais personne ait
+trouvé cet enseignement repréhensible. L'orthodoxie
+de mon enseignement avait dû être attestée à votre
+Sainteté lorsqu'elle daigna me choisir pour aller à
+Vienne combattre certains docteurs allemands dont les
+principes ébranlaient les fondements de la foi catholique.
+Que mon discours d'aujourd'hui soit soumis à
+l'examen d'une commission de théologiens; je ne redoute
+pas ce jugement.</q> Des paroles menaçantes pour
+le cardinal ont terminé cet entretien. Le matin, après
+la séance, un prélat domestique disait dans la salle
+même du Concile: après un pareil discours, le cardinal
+devrait etre enfermé pendant dix jours dans un couvent
+pour y vaquer aux exercices spirituels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+La puissance absolue du Pape, son opinion visible,
+le pouvoir arbitraire qu'exercent les présidents, la pétulance
+<pb n='849'/><anchor id='Pg849'/>
+de certains prélats, trop notoirement passionnés
+et violents; tout cela pèse sensiblement sur les
+membres les plus sages de l'assemblée qui ne peuvent
+s'empêcher de s'en plaindre avec tristesse dans des
+entretiens intimes. Faut-il s'étonner que plusieurs, le
+fait est très certain, expriment le désir d'un vote secret,
+s'il était possible?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+C'est avec une douleur profonde que nous racontons
+toutes ces choses. Mais la situation de l'Église en ce
+moment est telle qu'on ne peut se dispenser de parler.
+Au Concile du Vatican se traite une question de l'ordre
+le plus élevé Chacun a le droit de savoir comment
+est conduit ce grand procès, qui est le procès de tous.
+Il s'agit de la paix du monde, il s'agit aussi de choses
+qui sont au-dessus de tous les intérêts périssables, de la
+foi, de la conscience et du salut éternel des âmes.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='850'/><anchor id='Pg850'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Appendix IV.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Letter of a French Bishop to Count Daru.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On sait à Rome que vous aviez l'intention de rédiger
+une note ou un memorandum qui devrait être appuyé
+par les puissances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Si vous agissez, vous serez appuyés. Ici les diplomates
+se plaignent de votre inaction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mais il faut agir immédiatement, on veut introduire
+l'infaillibilité après Pâques.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vous ne pouvez rien faire par le M. de Banneville.
+Ses collègues ne le comptent pour rien, sinon pour un
+obstacle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Il ne faut pas vous mettre exclusivement sur le
+terrain des canons des Ecclesia. On vous répondrait,
+soit en supprimant les Canons auxquels vous vous
+opposez; soit en disant que cela ne vous touche pas,
+à cause du concordat; soit, enfin, en les expliquant
+dans un sens qui vous paraîtra satisfaisant, quitte à
+décréter après tous les Canons, tous les Syllabus qu'ils
+voudront, et les plus formidables. Mais il y a un
+terrain où vous êtes invincibles, et sur lequel les
+puissances vous suivent. C'est celui de la liberté du
+<pb n='851'/><anchor id='Pg851'/>
+Concile et du droit publique de l'Église, sous la protection
+duquel vos évêques sont venus à Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cette liberté n'existe plus. Ce droit est violé sur
+un point que plus de 100 évêques ont déclaré de la
+dernière importance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leur protestation vous donne un point de départ et
+des arguments invincibles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ces évêques déclarent que le Règlement est contraire
+à la loi de l'Église sur le point décisif de la
+Majorité. Car ce droit, depuis Nicée jusqu'à Trente,
+déclare que la règle indisputable et certaine pour les
+définitions dogmatiques c'est l'unanimité morale, et
+non la majorité.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Un nombre immense de faits confirme leur protestation:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Les scènes de violence faites à Haynald et à Strossmayer.&mdash;Les
+Présidents n'ont pas cherché à protéger
+leur droit et liberté de parole, tout au contraire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+La précipitation de la discussion par les Présidents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Le Schema de Fide, 4 chapitres, 20 pages, canons
+avec anathèmes, a été distribué 24 heures seulement
+avant l'ouverture de la discussion, on a voté sur 47
+amendements en 5 quarts d'heure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Le lendemain de là scène avec Strossmayer, on a
+lu un <hi rend='italic'>Monitum</hi>, non pas pour admonéter les interrupteurs,
+mais pour recommander aux orateurs de se
+presser, de peur qu'ils n'ennuyent l'assemblée, et n'en
+provoquent des manifestations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ce <hi rend='italic'>Monitum</hi> est une provocation aux interruptions.
+Quelquefois un évêque est reçu avec des murmures
+avant de commencer.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='852'/><anchor id='Pg852'/>
+
+<p>
+Les demandes de la Minorité:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+D'une salle où on puisse les entendre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+De bureaux, pour les discussions préliminaires, qui
+enverraient des Commissaires à la Députation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+De la liberté d'imprimer leurs discours et mémoires
+pour les distribuer parmi les pères.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Que les auteurs d'amendements puissent les expliquer
+et les défendre dans la Commission, et puissent
+avoir le droit de répondre dans les discussions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+D'un procès-verbal des séances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sur la majorité et l'unanimité.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toutes ces demandes sont restées sans réponse et
+sans effet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+La pression exercée sur les Orientaux.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+La scène faite au Patriarche Chaldéen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+L'emprisonnement intimé à l'Archévêque d'Antioche
+et au chef de sa communauté.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+L'arrestation et les coups donnés au prêtre, secrétaire
+de l'Arch. de Diarbelair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Les menaces aux Melchites, Maronites, et Chaldéens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Le langage tenu par le pape lui même. Les cas de
+Montalembert et de Falloux.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Les lettres du pape à Guéranger, Cabrières, etc.,
+traitant les Évêques de l'Opposition en ennemis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Les allocutions publiques roulant presque toutes sur
+l'Infaillibilité.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Les cadeaux faits aux Vicaires Apostoliques en les
+priant de ne pas l'abandonner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Attitude de la presse approuvée par le Vatican,
+exploitant ces lettres, et appelant les évêques à se retracter,
+en les dénonçant à leur clergé.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='853'/><anchor id='Pg853'/>
+
+<p>
+Même le journal officiel de Rome traitant la minorité
+d'alliés des Franc-maçons. Après tout cela, il n'y a pas
+de liberté au Concile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+L'ambassadeur que vous enverrez en recevra des
+preuves péremptoires. Les autres puissances sont déjà
+plus avancées que la France: la Prusse, la Hongrie,
+même la Turquie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A nom de l'ordre publique menacé par l'inévitable
+refus de reconnaître ce Concile. Au nom de votre droit,
+ayant rendu possible la réunion du Concile, de protéger
+la liberté de vos évêques.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dire&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Ce Concile ne peut pas continuer dans les conditions
+actuelles.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Nous protestons dès à présent contre la Non-liberté
+manifeste du Concile.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Achevez ce que vous avez déjà commencé.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Il y a des points sur lesquels vous pouvez espérer
+l'unanimité morale, sans violation de liberté.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Tenez une session publique sur les <hi rend='italic'>Schema de Fide</hi>
+et de Discipline assez pour sauver votre honneur.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend='pre'>Et prorogez une assemblée qui, aux yeux des
+évêques et du monde, ne possède plus ces conditions
+d'ordre et de liberté sans lesquelles ce n'est pas un Concile.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Nous désirons que nos évêques retournent dans leurs
+diocèses jusqu'à ce que les conditions soient plus favorables
+pour la célébration d'un Concile.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='854'/><anchor id='Pg854'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Appendix V.</head>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Protestation contre le projet de précipiter la
+Discussion.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+(<hi rend='italic'>Presented early in May.</hi>)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Permettez, Monseigneur, que je proteste ici contre
+un tel projet, s'il existe, et que je consigne entre vos
+mains ma protestation. Saisir ainsi, irrégulièrement et
+violemment, le Concile de cette question, c'est absolument
+impossible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cette discussion immédiate de l'Infaillibilité Pontificale,
+avant toutes les autres questions qui la doivent
+nécessairement précéder, ce renversement de l'ordre et
+de la marche régulière du Concile, cette précipitation
+passionnée dans l'affaire la plus délicate, et qui par sa
+nature et ses difficultés, exige le plus de maturité et de
+calme, tout cela serait non seulement illogique et
+absurde, inconcevable, mais encore trahirait trop ouvertement
+aux yeux du monde entier, chez ceux qui
+imaginent de tels procédés, le dessein de peser sur le
+Concile, et pour dire le vrai mot, serait absolument
+contraire à la liberté des évêques.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Comment une telle question, sous-introduite tout à
+<pb n='855'/><anchor id='Pg855'/>
+coup dans un chapitre annexé à un grand <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign>, le
+dessein de ceux qui nous ont été soumis, passerait avant
+tous les schemata déjà étudiés, avant toutes les autres
+questions déjà discutées, et non encore résolues par le
+Concile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Des questions fondamentales, essentiellement préliminaires
+à toutes les autres; Dieu, sa personnalité, sa
+providence, Jésus-Christ, sa divinité, sa redemption, sa
+grâce, l'Église, on laisserait tout celà de coté pour se précipiter
+sur cette question, dont nous n'avions entendu
+parler avant le Concile presque qu'à des Journalistes,
+dont la bulle de convocation ne parlait pas, dont le
+<foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Schema</foreign> sur l'Église lui-même ne disait pas un seul mot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Et l'examen de cette nouvelle question, si compliquée,
+cette discussion, si nécessaire, cette définition si grave,
+tout cela se ferait à la hâte, violemment, au pied levé.
+On ne nous laisserait ni le temps ni la liberté d'étudier
+un point si important de doctrine avec gravité et à fond,
+comme il doit l'être. Car aucun évêque ne peut, sans
+blesser gravement sa conscience, déclarer de foi, sous
+peine de damnation éternelle, un point de doctrine de
+la révélation duquel il n'est pas absolument certain. Ce
+serait, Monseigneur, dans le monde entier, une stupeur
+et un scandale. Ce serait de plus autoriser trop manifestement
+les calomnies de ceux qui disent que dans la
+convocation du Concile, il y a eu une arrière pensée, et
+que cette question qui n'était pas l'objet du Concile,
+au fond devait être tout le Concile. Ceux qui poussent
+à de tels excès oublient clairement toute prudence: il y
+a un bon sens et une bonne foi publique qu'on ne blesse
+pas impunément.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='856'/><anchor id='Pg856'/>
+
+<p>
+Sans doute on peut passer par dessus toutes les recriminations
+des ennemis de l'Église; mais il y a des
+difficultés avec lesquelles il faut nécessairement compter.
+Eh bien! Éminence, si les choses venaient à se
+passer de la sorte, je le dis avec toute la conviction de
+mon âme, il y aurait lieu de craindre que des doutes
+graves ne s'élèvent touchant la vérité même et la liberté
+de ce Concile du Vatican.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Que les choses se passent ainsi, on le peut, si on le
+veut: on peut tout, contre la raison et le droit, avec la
+force du nombre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mais c'est lendemain, Éminence, que commenceraient
+pour vous et pour l'Église les difficultés.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Par un procédé aussi contraire à l'ordre régulier des
+choses, à la marche essentielle des assemblées d'évêques
+qui ont été de vrais Conciles, vous susciteriez incontestablement
+une lutte dans l'Église et les consciences sur
+la question de l'issue œcuménique de notre assemblée:
+c'est à dire, tout ce qu'on peut imaginer aujourd'hui de
+plus désastreux.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ceux qui essayent d'engager le Pape dans cette voie,
+en l'abusant et le trompant, sont bien coupables. Mais
+je ne doute pas que la sagesse du Saint-Père ne déjoue
+toutes ces menées.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<pb n='857'/><anchor id='Pg857'/>
+
+<div rend='page-break-before: always'>
+<index index='toc'/>
+<index index='pdf'/>
+<head>Advertisement.</head>
+
+<p>
+Third Edition, Crown 8vo, 7s. 6d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>The Pope and the Council.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By Janus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend='italic'>Authorized Translation From The German.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Opinions of the Press.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Had the book been, as its title might at first seem to imply, merely a
+Zeitschrift evoked by the exigencies of the present controversy, we should not
+have noticed it here. It is because it has an independent and permanent interest
+for the historical and theological student, quite apart from its bearing
+on the controversies of the day, and contains a great deal of what, to the
+immense majority of English, if not also of German readers, will be entirely
+new matter, grouped round a common centre-point which gives unity and
+coherence to the whole, that it falls strictly within the province of this
+journal.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Academy</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>October 9</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>In this volume the main idea of the writers, the long fatal growth of the
+principles which are now about to develop into the dogma of the Pope's
+personal and exclusive infallibility, is traced in full detail, with a learning
+which would be conspicuous in any of the divided branches of the Church,
+with a plain-speaking which few Roman Catholics have been able to afford,
+and with a sobriety and absence of exaggeration not common among Protestants.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Guardian</hi>,
+<hi rend='italic'>October 13</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>A profound and learned treatise, evidently the work of one of the first
+theologians of the day, discussing with the scientific fulness and precision
+proper to German investigation, the great doctrinal questions expected to
+come before the Council, and especially the proposed dogma of Papal Infallibility.
+There is probably no work in existence that contains at all, still less
+within so narrow a compass, so complete a record of the origin and growth of
+the infallibilist theory, and of all the facts of Church history bearing upon it,
+and that too in a form so clear and concise as to put the argument within the
+reach of any reader of ordinary intelligence, while the scrupulous accuracy of
+the writer, and his constant reference to the original authorities for every
+statement liable to be disputed, makes the monograph as a whole a perfect
+storehouse of valuable information for the historical or theological student.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Saturday
+Review</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>October 16</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It affords an opportunity for persons in this country to learn, on the
+most direct authority, how the grave questions which just now agitate the
+Church are regarded by members of a school within her pale, who profess to
+yield to none in their loyal devotion to Catholic truth, but are unable to
+identify its interests with the advance of Ultramontanism. Its aim is to show
+that the object in chief of the coming Council is to elect Papal Infallibility
+into an article&mdash;and therefore inevitably a cardinal article&mdash;of the Catholic
+Faith. It purports to investigate by the light of history this and other questions
+which are to be decided at the Council, as well as to serve as a contribution
+to ecclesiastical history.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Morning Post</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>October 20</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='858'/><anchor id='Pg858'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>The concluding words of the volume, coming as they evidently do from
+a great leader of thought among German Catholics, are so startling and suggestive
+that we give the passage as it stands, while exhorting our readers to
+lose no time in procuring and carefully perusing the whole volume for themselves.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Church
+Herald</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>October 20</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is our intention to deal with this book hereafter as it deserves, for we
+have reason to believe, we will not say to know, lest we should imitate the
+vicious example of Janus, that the work is a fabrication of English and
+German hands. Its name has been well chosen; Janus had two faces, which
+nationally may mean English and German, but in morals signifies a character
+not highly estimable for truth.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Tablet</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>October 16</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This extraordinary work should be read by the millions of Protestant
+England, as the ablest and most authentic exposure of the ecclesiastical and
+political despotism of Popery which exists in any language or any country.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Rock</hi>,
+<hi rend='italic'>October 20</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We feel, as we have already said, that it is hardly possible in a review to
+give an adequate idea of the volume before us, considered merely as a storehouse
+of facts on the Roman controversy, a value enhanced by the circumstance
+that it is written by earnest but sorrowing members of that Church,
+who desire, by its publication, to avert the progress of corruption and to save
+the Church from the blundering threatened by the action of the Council. We
+had marked many passages for extract in the course of our own examination.
+Space, however, forbids our indulging ourselves. We regret this the less because
+we feel assured that the book which we have so imperfectly noticed will
+soon be in the hands of most persons interested in the question which is
+debated.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>John Bull</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>October 23</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is of great importance at such a crisis that the public mind should be
+thoroughly informed as to the points on which the judgment of the Council is
+to be asked, or, to speak more correctly, as to the monstrous claims of the
+Papacy to which it is expected to give its formal submission. Especially is it
+desirable to understand clearly the exact position occupied by the <q>Liberal
+Catholics,</q> men who are not prepared to forsake their Church nor to declare
+war against all progress, and who, despite many discouragements, still cling
+to the belief that it is possible to find some mode of reconciliation between
+<q>Catholic</q> principles and modern ideas, and who resent such fanatical outbursts
+as that of Archbishop Manning even more bitterly than Protestants
+themselves. We attach, therefore, great value to a little volume just issued
+on the <q>Pope and the Council,</q> by Janus, which contains a more complete
+statement of the whole case than we have anywhere met with.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Nonconformist</hi>,
+<hi rend='italic'>October 27</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Beginning with a sketch of the errors and contradictions of the Popes, and
+of the position which, as a matter of history, they held in the early Church,
+the book proceeds to describe the three great forgeries by which the Papal
+claims were upheld&mdash;the Isidorian decretals, the donation of Constantine, and
+the decretum of Gratian. The last subject ought to be carefully studied by
+all who wish to understand the frightful tyranny of a complicated system of
+laws, devised not for the protection of a people, but as instruments for grinding
+them to subjection. Then, after an historical outline of the general growth of
+the Papal power in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the writers enter
+upon the peculiarly episcopal and clerical question, pointing out how marvellously
+every little change worked in one direction, invariably tending to throw
+<pb n='859'/><anchor id='Pg859'/>
+the rule of the Church into the power of Rome; and how the growth of new
+institutions, like the monastic orders and the Inquisition, gradually withdrew
+the conduct of affairs from the Bishops of the Church in general, and consolidated
+the Papal influence. For all this, however, unless we could satisfy ourselves
+with a mere magnified table of contents, the reader must be referred to
+the book itself, in which he will find the interest sustained without flagging
+to the end.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Pall Mall Gazette</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>October 29</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is very able, learned, compact, and conclusive. The subject of Papal
+Infallibility is admirably treated, with a thorough mastery of Church history.
+We commend it to the perusal of all who take an interest in the progress of
+ecclesiastical questions, and wish to become more nearly acquainted with
+the Romish Church, its doings, pretensions, decrees&mdash;especially with the
+conduct of its successive heads. It is a perfect storehouse of facts brought
+together with telling effect. Let the voice of these German Catholics be
+listened to by enlightened Englishmen of all creeds, and they will be in no
+danger of ensnarement from the plausible rhetoric of Ultramontanism, whose
+principles are opposed to our free institutions&mdash;to the glory and strength of
+England.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Athenæum</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>October 30</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>In France, in Holland, and in Germany, there has already appeared a
+multitude of disquisitions on this subject. Among these several are the
+acknowledged compositions of men of high standing in the Roman Catholic
+world,&mdash;men admittedly entitled to speak with the authority that must attach
+to established reputation: but not one of them has hitherto produced a work
+more likely to create a deep impression than the anonymous German publications
+at the head of this notice. It is not a piece of merely polemical writing,
+it is a treatise dealing with a large subject in an impressive though partisan
+manner&mdash;a treatise grave in tone, solid in matter, and bristling with forcible
+and novel illustrations.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Spectator</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>November 6</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is, as all our readers know, a history of how the Papal claims have
+grown from their modest germs in the <emph>fifth</emph>, down to their full development in
+the <emph>sixteenth</emph> century. This history, too, is accompanied by a corresponding
+exhibition of the inconsistency of these claims with actual facts. But the
+work is done with such elaborate care, and with such a well-marshalled and
+complete view of the historical facts of the case, that it may well be bought
+and read irrespective of the circumstances which have called it forth. It is a
+full, able, and learned bill of indictment against Popery proper.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Literary
+Churchman</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>November 13</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This book, characterized by great ability, singular grasp, and scholarship,
+demonstrates, with proof infallible, that the Ultramontane doctrine of the
+Pope's infallibility is the centre of an arch based upon error, raised by cunning
+craft, settled and cemented by shameless treachery. And this most damaging
+exposure of Popery proceeds from divines calling themselves <q>faithful
+Catholics.</q> No Ultramontane is able to sneer at the scholarship of the book;
+nor can they take off the edge of its blows by ascribing it to the malice of
+Protestants.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Record</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>November 17</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yet on this and other documents of the same kind, the whole fabric of
+Papal power and assumption has been built up. The forged donations of
+Constantine, Pepin, and Charlemagne are the title-deeds by which its possessions
+are held, and the <foreign lang='la' rend='italic'>Liber Pontificalis</foreign>, and Isidorian decretals, are the
+authorities on which it rests for the assertion of a power inconsistent alike
+with the rights of God and the liberties of man. We know of no book in which
+<pb n='860'/><anchor id='Pg860'/>
+the whole process is exposed with the same completeness and in the same
+brief compass, and we commend it to our readers as one from which they will
+derive an amount of valuable information for which otherwise they might
+search in vain.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>English Independent</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>November 18</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The book before us is making England and Germany ring with valiant
+and wise words of warning, which ought to make the representative of St.
+Peter weep tears of honest grief over past and present, the crooked policy
+of the one and the headstrong ambition of the other. As a rule, we may say
+that anti-Papal literature is of the lowest grade of literary merit, filled with
+illogical and inconclusive reasoning, and characterized by ignorance, bigotry,
+and cant. The present work is a splendid exception, severe in tone, but not
+unduly so, clear in statement, and unsparing in its dissection of the contradictions
+involved in modern Ultramontane theories. Its German authorship
+secures for it patient and exhaustive treatment of the subject; its Catholic
+origin places its statements far above the ordinary suspicions of unfairness,
+while it raises our admiration for the love of truth, which could lead men to
+oppose so bravely the current of popular Roman thought.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Church Times</hi>,
+<hi rend='italic'>November 26</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, what this book of Janus proves is, that all these <foreign rend='italic'>à priori</foreign> reasons
+for Papal Infallibility are absolutely worthless. They are beaten off the stage
+entirely and altogether. There is not the smallest atom of ground for them
+to stand upon.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Church Review</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>November 27</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This work, written by continental Roman Catholics of the liberal school,
+will be read in Protestant England with the deepest interest, and on more
+accounts than one. Accustomed as we are so much to view this great
+Church system of Rome with feelings of antagonism, it is well we should
+know and learn to sympathize with able and earnest men within its body, who
+are keenly alive to its weaknesses, and are anxiously seeking for light as to how
+Christianity, as they have received it, may help to solve the perplexities of the
+age. We should hope that no Protestant who reads this able treatise will feel
+differently. At the same time, it has no little value for us Protestants, in
+days when our Protestantism is so scornfully arraigned among ourselves; for
+if anything can justify our position and deepen our gratitude to a merciful
+Providence that has ruled our history, it is a candid work like this, proceeding
+from what we must call the opposite camp.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Contemporary Review</hi>,
+<hi rend='italic'>December</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Rumour will, no doubt, be busy with its conjectures as to the name which
+lurks beneath the <foreign lang='fr' rend='italic'>nom de plume</foreign> of <q>Janus.</q> We do not intend to offer any
+contribution towards the elucidation of the mystery, unless it be a contribution
+to say that the book bears internal evidence of being the work of a Catholic,
+and that there are not many Catholics in Europe who could have written it.
+Taking it all in all, it is no exaggerated praise to characterize it as the most
+damaging assault on Ultramontanism that has appeared in modern times. Its
+learning is copious and complete, yet so admirably arranged that it invariably
+illustrates without overlaying the argument. The style is clear and simple,
+and there is no attempt at rhetoric. It is a piece of cool and masterly dissection,
+all the more terrible for the passionless manner in which the author
+conducts the operation.</q>&mdash;<hi rend='smallcaps'>Times</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>December 3</hi>.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</body>
+<back rend="page-break-before: right">
+ <div id="footnotes">
+ <index index="toc" />
+ <index index="pdf" />
+ <head>Footnotes</head>
+ <divGen type="footnotes"/>
+ </div>
+ <div rend="page-break-before: right">
+ <divGen type="pgfooter" />
+ </div>
+</back>
+</text>
+</TEI.2>