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THIRD MILLENNIUM LIBRARY |
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THE LIVES OF THE SAINTS
BY THE
REV. S. BARING-GOULD
THE LIVES OF THE SAINTS, which I
have begun, is an undertaking, of whose difficulty few can have any idea. Let
it be remembered, that there were Saints in every century, for eighteen hundred
years; that their Acts are interwoven with the profane history of their times,
and that the history, not of one nation only, but of almost every nation under
the sun; that the records of these lives are sometimes fragmentary, sometimes
mere hints to be culled out of secular history; that authentic records have
sometimes suffered interpolation, and that some records are forgeries; that the
profane history with which the lives of the Saints is mixed up is often dark
and hard to be read; and then some idea may be formed of the difficulty of this
undertaking.
After having had to free the Acts of
a martyr from a late accretion of fable, and to decide whether the passion took
place under—say Decius or Diocletian, Claudius the Elder, or Claudius the
younger,—the writer of a hagiology is hurried into Byzantine politics, and has
to collect the thread of a saintly confessor's life from the tangle of political
and ecclesiastical intrigue, in that chaotic period when emperors rose and
fell, and patriarchs succeeded each other with bewildering rapidity. And thence
he is, by a step, landed in the romance world of Irish hagiology, where the
footing is as insecure as on the dark bogs of the Emerald Isle. Thence he
strides into the midst of the wreck of Charlemagne's empire, to gather among
the splinters of history a few poor mean notices of those holy ones living
then, whose names have survived, but whose acts are all but lost. And then the
scene changes, and he treads the cool cloister of a mediaeval abbey, to glean
materials for a memoir of some peaceful recluse, which may reflect the
crystalline purity of the life without being wholly colourless of incident.
And then, maybe, he has to stand in
the glare of the great conflagration of the sixteenth century, and mark some
pure soul passing unscathed through the fire, like the lamp in Abraham's
vision.
That one man can do justice to this
task is not to be expected. When Bellarmine heard of the undertaking of
Rosweydus, he asked "What is this man's age? does he expect to live two
hundred years?" But for the work of the Bollandists, it would have been an
impossibility for me to undertake this task. But even with this great
store-house open, the work to be got through is enormous. Bollandus began
January with two folios in double columns, close print, of 1200 pages each. As
he and his coadjutors proceeded, fresh materials came in, and February occupies
three volumes. May swelled into seven folios, September into eight, and October
into ten. It was begun in 1643, and the fifty-seventh volume appeared in 1861.
The labor of reading, digesting, and selecting from this library is enormous.
With so much material it is hard to decide what to omit, but such a decision
must be made, for the two volumes of January have to be crushed into one, not a
tenth of the size of one of Bollandus, and the ten volumes for October must
suffer compression to an hundredth degree, so as to occupy the same dimensions.
I had two courses open to me. One to give a brief outline, bare of incident, of
the life of every Saint; the other to diminish the number of lives, and present
them to the reader in greater fullness, and with some colour. I have adopted
this latter course, but I have omitted no Saint of great historical interest. I
have been compelled to put aside a great number of lesser known saintly
religious, whose eventless lives flowed uniformly in prayer, vigil, and
mortification.
In writing the lives of the Saints,
I have used my discretion, also, in relating only those miracles which are most
remarkable, either for being fairly well authenticated, or for their intrinsic
beauty or quaintness, or because they are often represented in art, and are
therefore of interest to the archeologist. That errors in judgment, and
historical inaccuracies, have crept into this volume, and may find their way
into those that succeed, is, I fear, inevitable. All I can promise is, that I
have used my best endeavors to be accurate, having had recourse to all such
modern critical works as have been accessible to me, for the determining of dates,
and the estimation of authorities.
Believing that in some three
thousand and six hundred memoirs of men, many of whose lives closely resembled
each other, it would be impossible for me to avoid a monotony of style which
would become as tedious to the reader as vexatious to myself, I have
occasionally admitted the lives of certain Saints by other writers, thereby
giving a little freshness to the book, where there could not fail otherwise to
have been aridity; but I have, I believe, in no case, inserted a life by
another pen, without verifying the authorities.
At the head of every article the
authority for the life is stated, to which the reader is referred for fuller
details. The editions of these authorities are not given, as it would have
greatly extended the notices, and such information can readily be obtained from
that invaluable guide to the historian of the Middle Ages, Potthast: Bibliotheca Historica Medii Aevi Berlin,
1862 ; the second part of which is devoted to the Saints.
I have no wish that my work should
be regarded as intended to supplant that of Alban Butler. My line is somewhat
different from his. He confined his attention to the historical outlines of the
saintly lives, and he rarely filled them in with anecdote. Yet it is the little
details of a man's life that give it character, and impress themselves on the
memory. People forget the age and parentage of S. Gertrude, but they remember
the mouse running up her staff.
A priest of the Anglican Church, I
have undertaken to write a book which I hope and trust will be welcome to Roman
and Anglican Catholics, alike. It would have been unseemly to have carried
prejudice, impertinent
to have obtruded sectarianism, into a work like this. I have been called
to tread holy ground, and kneel in the midst of the great company of the
blessed; and the only fitting attitude of the mind for such a place, and such society,
is reverence. In reading the miracles recorded of the Saints, of which the
number is infinite, the proper spirit to observe is, no doubt, but discrimination.
Because much is certainly apocryphal in these accounts, we must not therefore
reject what may be true. The present age, in its vehement naturalism, places
itself, as it were, outside of the circle of spiritual phenomena, and is as likely
to deny the supernatural agency in a marvel, as a mediaeval was liable to attribute a
natural phenomenon to spiritual causes. In such cases we must consider the
evidence and its worth or worthlessness. It may be that, in God's dealings with men,
at a time when natural means of cure were unattainable, the supernatural
should abound, but that when the science of medicine became perfected, and the
natural was rendered available to all, the supernatural should, to some extent, at
least, be withdrawn.
Of the
Martyrologies referred to, it may be as well to mention the dates of
the most important. That of Ado is of the ninth century, Bede's of the
eighth; there are several bearing the name of S. Jerome, which differ from one
another, they are forms of the ancient Roman Martyrology. The Martyrology of Notker (D. 912), of
Rabanus Maurus (d. 856), of Usuardus (875), of Wandalbert (circ. 881). The general catalogue of the
Saints by Ferrarius was published in 1625, the
Martyrology of Maurolycus was composed in 145o, and published 1568. The modern
Roman Martyrology is based on that of Usuardus. It is impossible, in the
limited space available for a preface, to say all that is necessary on the
various Kalendars, and Martyrologies, that exist, also on the mode in which some
of the Saints have received apotheosis. Comparatively few Saints have received
formal canonization at Rome; popular veneration was regarded as sufficient in
the mediaeval period, before order and system were introduced; thus there are
many obscure Saints, famous in their own localities, and perhaps entered in the
kalendar of the diocese, whose claims to their title have never been authoritatively
inquired into, and decided upon. There is also great confusion in the monastic
kalendars in appropriating titles to those commemorated; here a holy one is
called "the Venerable," there "the Blessed," and in another
"Saint." With regard also to the estimation of authorities, the notes
of genuineness of the Acts of the martyrs, the tests whereby apocryphal lives
and interpolations may be detected, I should have been glad to have been able
to make observations. But this is a matter which there is not space to enter
upon here.
The author cannot dismiss the work
without expressing a hope that it may be found to meet a want which he believes
has long been felt; for English literature is sadly deficient in the department
of hagiology.
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