THE DIVINE HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST |
READING HALL DOORS OF WISDOM |
LIFE OF SAINT CUTHBERT
CHAP. MAILROS I. Birth and Parentage of St. Cuthbert Enters the Monastery of Mailros. II. Rule of St. Columba. III. St. Cuthbert goes to Ripon Entertains an Angel. IV. Returns to Mailros His Sickness Death of St. Boisi. V. Is made Prior of Mailros Missionary Labours. VI. Visits Coldingham and the Country of the Picts LINDISFARNE. VII. Introduction of Christianity into the North St. Oswald and St. Aidan. VIII. Description of the Island of Lindisfarne, now Holy Island. IX. St. Cuthbert made Prior of Lindisfarne. X. Begins a Solitary Life in St. Cuthbert's Island FARNE. XI. Retires to Farne. XII. Companionship with the Wild Birds on Farne. XIII. Visits the Abbess Elfleda at Coquet Island. XIV. Elected Bishop. XV. His Consecration at York. XVI. His life as Bishop Labours and Miracles. XVII. Death of King Egfrid. XVIII. St. Cuthbert and St. Herbert. XIX. Visits the Abbess Verca at Tynemouth. XX. Returns to Farne LAST ILLNESS AND DEATH. XXI. Last Illness and Death, as related by the Prior Herefrid. XXII. His Body is taken to Lindisfarne. XXIII. His grave is opened, and the Body of the Saint found entire and incorrupt. XXIV. The Danes land on the North Coast. They plunder the Monastery of Lindis farne. XXV. Attempted Flight to Ireland. XXVI. The Wanderers find shelter at Craike Guthlake proclaimed King CHESTER-LE-STREET. XXVII. Episcopal See founded at Chester-leStreet. XXVIII. Second Flight. The Body of the Saint taken to Ripon DURHAM. XXIX. The Bishops and Monks leave Ripon and settle at Durham. XXX. Flight to Lindisfarne. XXXI. Benedictine Monks introduced into Durham. XXXII. Building of Present Cathedral. XXXIII. Translation of the Body of St. Cuthber into the Present Cathedral. XXXIV. Public Examination of the Body of the Saint. XXXV. The Episcopal See and Abbey Church, from 1083 to the Dissolution. XXXVI. Desecration of the Shrine. XXXVII. St. Cuthbert s Body placed in a new grave under the place where the Shrine stood. XXVIII. The Vault opened in the year 1827. XIXX. Festival of St. Cuthbert in 1448 and 1887 a Contrast MAILROS.
BIRTH AND PARENTAGE OF ST. CUTHBERT. ENTERS THE MONASTERY OF MAILROS.OF all the valleys of Scotland, that which is watered by the Tweed's "fair river, broad and deep," is the most interesting, if not the most beautiful. The river, which, many think, rivals the Rhine in picturesqueness and variety, rises near the north-west extremity of Tweeddale on the borders of Lanarkshire, flows to the town of Peebles, and in its impetuous course is swollen by many smaller streams, celebrated in Border minstrelsy. Thence through richly-wooded banks, whose heights are crowned by a ram part of ancient border pele-towers, it pursues a more easterly course by Melrose, Kelso, and Coldstream, till it falls into the sea at Tweedmouth. Everywhere its banks are most fertile and beautiful, but in the neigh bourhood of Melrose grandeur is combined with richness. The view from Bemerside hill, which overlooks the whole scene, is most striking in extent and loveliness. The eye wanders over an immense plain dotted with villages and hamlets, through which the noble river flows along a diversified stretch of soft landscape, making many curves and windings, while from the water edge rise up here a dense clump of dark pines, there steep and verdant slopes, to which the bold summits of a line of lofty hills form a majestic background. At one extremity of this plain, not far from the ancient village of Mailros, but on the oppo site bank, the river Leader, a tributary stream, empties itself into the Tweed. Here, on the grassy side of the Lammermoor hills, which slope down to the river, on the night of the 31st of August, in the year of our Lord 651, a young shepherd boy was watching his master's sheep, and engaged, as was his wont, in prayer, when on a sudden a glorious vision burst on his view. He saw the sky, which had been intensely dark, broken by a silvery track of light, upon which a troop of angels descended from heaven, and again ascended, bearing with them a resplendent soul, which they had gone to earth to meet. This youth was Cuthbert, the future Patron Saint of Durham, and the happy soul es corted by angels that of the great St. Aidan, the Apostle of Bernicia and the first Bishop of Lindisfarne, who on that night had breathed his last in his little cell at the west end of the church in the royal city of Bamborough. This vision was the turning-point in the life of Cuthbert, for from this moment, im pressed with the vanity of all earthly things, and emulous of the glorious termination of a Saint s career, he resolved to renounce the world and consecrate himself wholly to God in the Monastic state; and we next meet with him at the gate of the Monastery of Mailros, where he arrived mounted on a charger, lance in hand, and attended by an esquire. Before crossing the threshold of the cloister with him it will interest my readers to be told something about the early life of the young postulant and the place of his choice, its situation, its founders, and the great memories which gather round it. We know nothing for certain of the birth and parentage of Cuthbert. Though many centuries later, attempts were made to claim him as a native of Ireland, and to invest his infancy with a halo of romance, yet, from the silence of his early biographers and contemporary writers, we cannot attach much credence to this story. It is most probable that he was born in Lauderdale, a district then annexed to Northumbria, which had just been delivered by the saintly King Oswald from the yoke of the Mercians and Britons, and near to the spot where the Leader mingles its waters with the Tweed, and where we first meet him as a boy, watching the flocks on the mountain side. But though we find him thus employed, we must not conclude that he was of poor extraction. His family was probably of the rank of those vassals to whom, as Ven. Bede tells us, the great Saxon lords gave the care of their vast flocks on the extensive downs or commons where the shepherds lived, day and night, in the open air, with merely the shelter of a projecting rock or hillock, as is still done by the shepherds on the Cheviots and the Grampians. His parents must have died when he was a child, for we learn from Ven. Bede, that he was brought up from his boyhood by a holy woman (named Kenspid), who acted as his foster-mother, and for whom he ever retained an affectionate remembrance, and whom he often visited. He was probably indebted to this saintly nurse for the devotion and piety which were conspicuous in him from infancy. Symeon of Durham says of him, "that his whole conversation from his childhood was in heaven, and that in his youth he imitated the life of an angel". "The story of his youth reads," says the historian of the monks of the west, "like that of an English boy of our own day," and goes to establish his Saxon origin. He was a ringleader in all athletic sports, and excelled his playmates in running, wrestling, jumping, and other boyish games. With all this exuberance of high spirits and physical prowess, he always retained his innocence, and was noted for his good disposition. His venerable biographer tells, on the authority of Bishop Trunwine, who had it from Cuthbert himself, a charming anecdote showing how open he was to religious im pressions, and which was prophetic of his after career. One day a number of boys, of whom he was one, were engaged wrestling in a meadow, when suddenly a child of the age of three years, as it would appear, ran up to Cuthbert, and with all the gravity of old age, began to exhort him not to indulge in these idle sports. Cuthbert having paid no attention to this admonition, the little fellow threw himself on the ground, and, with tears running down his cheeks, exhibited signs of the greatest grief. Some of his companions ran to console him, and Cuthbert also tried to comfort him, upon which he exclaimed, "Why will you behave thus, so contrary to your rank, O Cuthbert, most holy prelate and priest ? It becomes not you to sport among children ; you whom the Lord has conse crated to be a teacher of virtue to your elders." When Cuthbert heard these words, he received them with fixed attention, and soothing the sorrowing child with affectionate kindness, he resolved henceforth to forsake these vain sports, and returning home, he began to be more grave in his deportment from that time forth, and more manly in disposition. From this date (he was now eight years cf age) Cuthbert gave himself unreservedly to the service of God. He withdrew more and more from his companions, and from the pastimes in which he had taken so much delight, and spent many hours in the day and at night in solitude and prayer. By little and little his affections were weaned from all earthly things, and inflamed with the love of those that were heavenly. In reward for his docility to the inspirations of the Holy Ghost, "assuredly teaching him in his inmost heart," many miraculous graces were vouchsafed to his prayers. On one occasion he was seized with a sudden and violent pain in his knee, which caused it to swell to such a size that he was unable to stand or move. His attendants had carried him out of doors into the open air, and whilst reclining in the sun, a horseman, clothed in white garments, "piously believed to be an angel," rode up, and courteously requested hospitality from Cuthbert. On Cuthbert excusing himself on account of his infirmity, the stranger sprang from his horse, and after carefully examining his knee, prescribed a poultice of warm milk and flour, and then mounting his horse rode away. Cuthbert applied the remedy which had been recommended, and in a few days was restored to his usual health. Then Cuthbert knew that it was an angel whom God had sent to heal him. The following event seems to belong to this period. Some of the monks of the Monastery of Tiningham, situated on the banks of the river Tine, a stream which falls into the sea north of Dunbar, were engaged in steering some rafts which contained a supply of wood for their use. On arriving opposite the monastery, they were endeavouring to draw them on shore, when on a sudden a tempestuous wind arose, driving them out seawards. The monks on shore, who witnessed this disaster from the monastery, immediately launched some boats with the view of assist ing those who were toiling on board the rafts; but being overpowered by the force of the current and the violence of the storm, their efforts were unavailing. Cuthbert happened to be standing on the opposite bank, sur rounded by a number of people, who, when they saw the rafts carried out to sea till almost out of sight, began to jeer at the monks who had ventured to introduce amongst them a new and unknown rule of life, and who deserved this punishment. Cuthbert at once checked the reproaches of the scoffers, exclaiming : "What are you doinf brethren, in speaking evil against those you see hurried away towards death? Would it not be more like men, were you to pray to the Lord for their safety, than thus to rejoice at their peril?" The only reply he got from these rude and churlish people was : "Let no one pray for them; may God have pity on none of them, who have taken away our old worship, and no one knows how to observe the new!". Cuthbert, not heeding them, at once fell upon his knees, and, bowing his head to the ground, prayed earnestly to God; and at once the violence of the winds being turned towards the land, the rafts were brought in safety to the beach. On seeing this the rustics blushed for their unbelief, and extolled, with loud applause, the faith of the youthful servant of God. Once whilst on a solitary journey in winter, he lost his way amongst the moors and turned his horse's steps towards a lonely farmstead. The woman of the house welcomed him warmly, and earnestly besought him to allow her to prepare dinner for him. This, however, he refused, for it was Friday, and it was then the custom to fast on that day till even ing, in honour of our Lord's Passion. He again set forth on his journey, but was overtaken by night on the mountains, and was forced to take shelter in a deserted shepherd's hut, a shealing now almost in ruins. Though quite exhausted with hunger and the fatigue of a long day s wandering, he tied up his horse to the wall, and having fed it with a handful of dry grass which had been blown off the roof, he betook himself to prayer. Whilst he was thus engaged, his steed, nibbling at the thatch of the roof of the cottage, pulled out a bundle wrapped in a linen cloth, in which was found some bread and meat. Cuthbert, giving thanks to God, divided the bread, and gave one-half to his horse, reserving the rest for his own refreshment. The Monastery of Mailros, to which we must now turn our attention, was not on the same site as the one whose graceful ruins still attract the wonder and admiration of all who visit them. About two miles lower clown the river, the Tweed makes an abrupt and semi-circular sweep, almost in the form of a horse-shoe, and in the centre of the peninsula thus formed stood the Monastery of old Mailros. It was one of the offshoots from Lindisfarne, which were founded by St. Oswald and St. Aidan about the year 635. Its name is said to be derived from its position an open space of green turf in the midst of the surrounding forest, and nearly surrounded by water from two Celtic words mul, signifying bare, and rhos, a promontory. Its first Abbot was the "gentle" Eata, one of the twelve Saxon boys who were trained by St. Aidan in his Cathedral School at Lindis farne. Under him was the Prior Boisil, or Boswell, the fame of whose sanctity mainly influenced Cuthbert in the choice of this monastery. I may as well here glance at the after-fate of this house. After having flourished for two hundred years, under a race of distinguished abbots many of whom became canonised saints the monastery was burnt down by Kenneth, King of the Scots, in 839, in one of his many invasions of the Saxon territory. It remained in ruins for several years, during the Danish inroads into the North; but the buildings were probably restored and again inhabited before 875, for in that year it became one of the resting-places of the Body of St. Cuthbert after the removal from Lindisfarne and during the seven years weary pilgrimage, and it was from here that the coffin was said to have floated down the river to Tilmouth. After it had laid waste for many years, we hear of it about 1073 as giving shelter for a short season to a few fugitive monks. They were led by Aldwine, Prior of Wincalcombe in Gloucestershire, who, in search of a holy and more mortified life, had induced two of his monks to accompany him to Northumber land. They first came to Muncaceaster (Newcastle), and Bishop Walcher gave them the ruined Monastery of St. Paul at Jarrowon-the-Tyne, where, in the midst of many privations, suffering much from cold and hunger, they began to celebrate the divine, offices of the Church. From thence they removed to Mailros, where they continued to lead severe lives, in monastic seclusion, until, in 1075, they were recalled by Bishop Walcher to Durham, and were soon after settled by the Bishop at Monkwearmouth, where they restored the ancient Monastery of Bennet Biscop which had been destroyed by the Danes. All that survived of the venerable Abbey of Mailros was a chapel dedicated to St. Cuthbert, which as late as the 15th century was a famous resort of pilgrims. The foundations of the wall, which enclosed the convent on the land side, were standing in 1743, but all traces of the monastic buildings, and of the Chapel of St. Cuthbert, have been utterly destroyed. The names which still cling to various spots, such as "Chapel Knoll," and the "Holy Well", and the "Monk s ford" alone recall the memory of the venerable home of Boisil and Cuthbert. We learn from Symeon of Durham that Cuthbert s religious profession took place in 651, but nevertheless it is difficult to fix the chronology of his life. Some make him only fifteen years of age; but he was probably considerably older. It was a glorious day in the early autumn, such as is nowhere seen in such perfection as in the north of England. The setting sun was streaming through the dense foliage of the trees which hemmed in the monastery, lighting up the autumnal tints of colour which made the woods one blaze of beauty, and falling upon the golden locks and fair features of the young Saxon, who stood there waiting with downcast looks. It was a striking picture for the eyes of the venerable Boisil, who was standing in the doorway, to gaze upon. The countenance and whole bearing of the young postulant were but the reflection of the in terior purity and serenity of his spotless soul. His biographers love to dwell upon the beauty of his mind and form. "He was endowed," one tells us, "with a fairness and beauty beyond all description, a charming sweetness of countenance, and a most cap tivating address;" another says of him that he was "angelic in looks, refined in speech, saintly in works, vigorous in body, excelling in intellect, wise in counsel, Catholic in faith, and gifted in an eminent degree with the divine virtues of faith, hope, and charity. As soon as he set eyes upon him, the Prior Boisil recognised in Cuhbert the future Saint. "Behold a servant of God," he exclaimed to those who stood near him. Accordingly he at once conceived a great affection for his pupil, and devoted himself, with tender solicitude, to train up to the heights of Christian perfection this promising young plant. The youthful novice repaid his care, and threw himself with impassioned ardour into all the observances of monastic life. Being robust in body and of unbroken strength, he applied himself with unflagging zeal to the works prescribed by rule, such as reading, manual labour, watching and prayer, and in a short time surpassed in fervour all his fellow-novices. He carefully abstained from everything that could intoxicate; but was not able to practise great abstinence from food, lest he should become unfitted for his necessary work. RULE OF ST. COLUMBA.MAILROS
had received from St. Aidan, its founder, the rule established at Iona by St.
Columba. The monks of St. Columba came from Ireland; they were a branch of the
order as it had been established there by St. Patrick, borrowed by him from
the western monasteries, which he had personally visited both in Italy and
Gaul. Though differing in some details, it was similar in its essential
features to the constitutions of the great order of St. Benedict, and the
other monastic houses then flourishing in the Church.
The
monks took solemn vows and were tonsured, not on the top of the head, but from
ear to ear, on the fore part of the head. They consisted of three classes.
The
first division were the seniors, who formed the choir monks. Their day was occupied
in saying Mass, chanting the canonical hours, and carrying on the services of
the church, in reading and transcribing the Holy Scriptures, and in meditation
and prayer at stated times. Holy Mass was solemnly sung on all Sundays and
Festivals, and on other occasions appointed by the Abbot. The whole community
received Holy Communion from the hands of the officiating priest, or from the
Bishop, when he was present. Those monks who were stronger and fitted for labour, were termed the working brethren, and corresponded
to the lay-brothers of aftertimes. They cultivated the farms, and took care of
the cattle and sheep, were the cooks, and manufactured the various articles
required for personal or domestic use. One of these brothers held the office of
Cellarer (pincerna), and another that of Baker
(pistor).
The
third class consisted of the youth who were under instruction, and were termed Alumni,
or pupils.
The
dress of the monks consisted of a white habit (tunica) over which they
wore a camilla consisting of a body and hood,
made of wool, and of the natural colour of the
material. When working or travelling they wore sandals, which were usually
removed when sitting down to meat. Their food consisted of bread,—sometimes
made of barley—milk, fish, eggs; and in Iona they appear to have also used
seals’ flesh. On Sundays and Festivals, and on the arrival of a guest, an
addition, probably of flesh meat such as beef or mutton, was made to the
principal meal. An important feature of this monastic system, as of all others,
was the penitential system to which the monks were subjected. They fasted on
all Wednesdays and Fridays, and during Lent, and it was a common custom for
many to pass a certain time with the body entirely immersed in water, whilst
reciting the whole or part of a psalter. Special spiritual exercises or
retreats, as now, were made under the direction of a spiritual director, or “soul-friend
”. After the commission of any offence, the penitent was required to confess,
on his knees, his fault before the community in Chapter assembled, and to
perform such penance as the Abbot prescribed.
It
is hardly necessary to add that the inmates of Mailros and Lindisfarne, as well as of Iona from which they sprung, were united in
faith with the universal Church. Unhappily there were two points of discipline
upon which they differed from the rest of Christendom—the observance of the
great Easter festival and the shape of the tonsure. The latter difference would
have been of no moment, had it not been made a subject of contention in
conjunction with the more important question of the proper date of celebrating
Easter. These two points led to much ill-feeling and partial separation between
the Celtic monks and the missionaries from Rome.
Such
was the rule followed in the monastery in which Cuthbert was trained. Bede does
not tell us when he was ordained priest; but as he received the tonsure from
the hands of Boisil, at the time of his religious profession, it is probable
that he was made a priest shortly before succeeding that venerable man in his
office of Prior.
ST. CUTHBERT GOES TO RIPON—ENTERTAINS AN ANGEL.
AFTER
spending a few quiet but fruitful years in the peaceful cloisters of Mailros, Cuthbert was transferred from the banks of the
Tweed to the banks of the Ure.
In
the year 661, King Alchfrid, the son of Oswin,
founded a monastery at Ripon, and made it over to the Abbot Eata, who introduced
the same monastic discipline which prevailed at Mailros.
He took St. Cuthbert with him to Ripon, and appointed him guest-master, an
office of great trust and responsibility, which shows the high estimation in
which he was held. Only one event connected with the life of our Saint during
his residence at Ripon has been handed down to us. In the discharge of his
duties a special grace, more than once shared by other great servants of God,
was conferred upon him, as a testimony to his sanctity. He was privileged to
entertain an angel, who came to the gate of the monastery in the guise of a
pilgrim, through the frost and snow of a bleak winter’s day. The humble monk
received his visitor with most winning kindness, washed and kissed his
feet—benumbed with cold—and warmed them by placing them on his bosom, and
chafing them with his hands. Immediately after the office of Tierce was
concluded in the chapel, and the meal-time was at hand, Cuthbert laid the table
and invited his guest to partake of food, saying, “I beseech thee, brother,
refresh thyself until I return with some new bread, for I expect it to be ready
baked by this time When he returned, he found that the stranger had
disappeared, and no trace of his footsteps could be seen, though a recent fall
of snow had covered the ground. The man of God, greatly amazed and wondering
inwardly, replaced the table in the inner apartment. On entering this room, he
perceived the fragrance of a marvellous sweet
perfume; and looking round, saw lying beside him three loaves yet warm, of
unwonted whiteness and beauty. Trembling, he said within himself, “It was an
angel of God whom I have received, who has come to feed, and not to be fed. Lo
! he has brought such loaves as this earth cannot produce, for they surpass
lilies in whiteness, roses in smell, and honey in flavour.”
RETURNS
TO MAILROS - HIS SICKNESS DEATH OF ST. BOISIL.
HIS
sojourn at Ripon was brief. Eata and his monks were driven out by the king to
make way for St. Wilfrid, the champion of the Catholic rule as to the
observance of Easter. Shortly after their return to Mailros (a.d. 664) a terrible epidemic broke out in Great Britain. So destructive were its ravages
that it was called the yellow plague. After well-nigh depopulating the southern
coasts, it burst with great fury upon Northumbria. Amongst those who fell
victims to this scourge were Tuda, the fourth Bishop of Lindisfarne, and many
of his monks. Both Cuthbert and the Prior Boisil were attacked by it. No sooner
was Cuthbert’s illness known to his brethren than the whole community passed
the entire night in praying for his recovery. When told of their affection and
charity, Cuthbert exclaimed, “Why am I lying here? It is not possible that God
should refuse your prayers!” and demanding his staff and his shoes, he at once
rose from his bed and speedily recovered his health, though his illness left
behind effects which clung to him till his dying day.
It
fared otherwise with the saintly Boisil, who, knowing that his end was near,
called upon his beloved disciple Cuthbert to watch by his bedside, and,
together with him, to read the Gospel of St. John, dividing it into seven
parts,—one part for each of the seven days which he foretold should be his.
last. This circumstance recalls that most touching of all narratives, the death
scene of the Ven. Bede, at Jarrow, seventy years later. St. John’s Gospel was a
special favourite with these saintly men of old. The
copy which was read by Boisil and his pupil was long preserved at Durham, and
that which St. Cuthbert carried with him in all his wanderings as Prior,
Anchorite, and Bishop, and which was taken from his tomb in 1104, is now one of
the most precious treasures of the library of the Jesuit Fathers at Stonyhurst. During the familiar intercourse which took place during his illness
between the aged Prior and St. Cuthbert, Boisil foretold to his disciple all
the events of his future life, and that he would one day be a Bishop. When the
seven days were accomplished St. Boisil’s soul entered into the joys of
eternal life, and in long after years his relics were placed alongside those of
his illustrious pupil and successor under the vaulted roof of the choir of the
majestic Cathedral of Durham.
IS
MADE PRIOR OF MAILROS—MISSIONARY LABOURS.
AFTER
Boisil’s death Cuthbert was appointed to succeed him as Prior, and with the
mantle of his office there descended upon his young disciple, not only his eminent
wisdom and sanctity, but his missionary spirit and burning zeal and love for
souls.
The
vale of the Tweed and Ettrick is now celebrated for its rich pastoral beauty. A
modern writer thus describes it: “Agriculture has chosen its valleys for her favourite seat, and drainage and steam-power have turned
sedgy marshes into farm and meadow. But to see the Lowlands as they were in
Cuthbert’s day, we must sweep away meadow and farm again, and replace them by
vast solitudes, dotted here and there with clusters of wooden hovels and
covered by boggy tracts, over which the traveller rode spear in hand, and eye kept cautiously about him.” Such were the features
of the region in which St. Cuthbert pursued his labours.
He went forth from the monastery sometimes on horseback but more generally on
foot. He spent whole days, often several weeks and even months, without
returning to his monastery, in evangelising the poor
scattered half-barbarous inhabitants, frequently detained in the wild mountains
and in the almost inaccessible and impenetrable swamps, by dreadful storms of
frost and snow, and exposed, with no other covering than the boughs of trees,
to the inclemency of the long dark nights. He moved amongst the people like an
angel, preaching as much by the example of his saintly life as by his words. “So great,” says the Ven. Bede, “was Cuthbert’s skill in teaching, so vast was
his power of loving persuasion, so striking was the light that beamed from his
angelic countenance, that no one in his presence dared to conceal from him the
hidden secrets of his heart, but each declared openly in confession what he had
done amiss, and strove to wipe away the sins he had confessed, as the Saint
commanded, with fruits worthy of repentance.” This venerable historian gives us
also a beautiful picture of the docility of the peasants, and their eagerness
to hear the word of God. “It was the custom,” he says, “in those days with the
English people, when a clerk or priest came into a village, for all to gather
together to hear the word of God, willingly hearkening to what was said, and
still more willingly following up by works what they heard and understood.”
These missionary labours were not confined to the
district round Mailros, but extended from the coast
of Berwick to the shores of the Solway. The name of Cuthbert still lives in the
traditions of the lowlands, and is preserved in the numerous churches raised in
his honour.
VISITS
COLDINGHAM AND THE COUNTRY OF THE PICTS.
AMONGST
the spots visited by Cuthbert was the Monastery of Coldingham.
This famous monastery was one of those founded by St. Aidan and afterwards
became a Cell to the great Benedictine Monastery at Durham. It was built upon a
high rock overhanging the sea, a short distance southward from the promontory
of St. Abb’s Head. The neck of land on which it was built stretches out into
the ocean, and has on three sides perpendicular rocks of great elevation,
against which the heavy billows of the North Sea dash with great force. The fourth
side was cut off from the mainland by a high wall and deep trench. It was a
double monastery—that occupied by the monks having been possibly on the site
upon which a later monastery was built—and St. Ebba, its first Abbess, from
whom the promontory takes its name, ruled over separate communities of men and
women. She was illustrious not only for her sanctity, but for her noble birth,
being the sister of St. Oswald and Oswi, Kings of
Northumbria. It has been said that, after first establishing a monastery at Ebchester, on the Derwent, she had, with the assistance of
her brother, King Oswi, founded the Monastery of Coldingham. Hearing of the wondrous life and miracles of
St. Cuthbert, the holy nun earnestly entreated the servant of God to pay her a
visit. Cuthbert could not refuse “what the charity of God’s hand maid so
strongly requested,” and remained at the monastery for several days. As was his
wont, he spent a portion of the night in prayer, and for this purpose went
forth when the brethren were asleep. A monk, who had noticed his departure,
secretly followed him, and saw Cuthbert walk to the beach, and enter into the
sea until the water reached to his arms and neck. He there spent a great portion
of the night in the praises of God— the rolling waves re-echoing the sound of
his voice. When the dawn approached, he came out of the water, and, falling on
his knees on the sands, concluded his prayers. A tradition still lingers
amongst the peasantry on the coast that two otters came out from the rocks,
licked his half-frozen feet, and wiped them with their hair. "When this
act was completed, Cuthbert gave them his blessing and dismissed them, while he
returned to his monastery to join with the monks in chanting matins.
On
his return to Mailros from Coldingham,
he proceeded by sea to visit the Picts of Galloway. Setting sail with two of
his brethren, he landed on the day after Christmas Day at a seaport in the
territory of the Niduari — the people of Nithsdale—
somewhere on the banks of the Dee, which falls into the Solway. Scarcely had
they reached the shore when a wild tempest arose, which prevented them again
putting to sea. For several days they suffered keenly from both cold and
hunger. Cuthbert encouraged his companions to trust to the good providence of
God, which is never wanting to His servants. Instead of yielding to fatigue and
want of sleep, he spent the whole night in prayer. On the eve of the festivity
of the Epiphany, he most earnestly urged his fellow-travellers to join with him in earnest supplications to our Lord, calling upon Him to succour them in their peril — as of old He had opened a way
for His people through the waters of the Red Sea, and fed them in the
wilderness with food miraculously sent from heaven. “I believe,” he said, “that
if our faith fail not, He will not leave us fasting on this day which He
Himself has vouchsafed to illustrate with so great and so many marvels of His
majesty.”
On
the morning of the festival he led them to the base of a cliff where he had
spent the watches of the night, and there they found three pieces of the flesh
of a dolphin, as if cut by human hands and ready for cooking. Having appeased
their hunger, they waited patiently for three days more, during which the storm
still raged, and on the fourth day launched their ship. On the spot where they
had been storm-stayed, tradition tells us that a church was afterwards built,
and the name Kirkcudbright—a royal Scottish borough—hands down to us a memorial
of their visit.
On
another occasion, with a young boy, his sole companion, he set out from the
monastery on one of his missionary expeditions; and as they were travelling
through a wild and lonely district, they were overtaken by the night, worn out
with the fatigue of a long day’s journey on foot. There being no means of
obtaining refreshment, Cuthbert had recourse as usual to God in secret prayer.
It was revealed to him that his prayer was heard, and full of gratitude for
God’s unfailing goodness, he said to his companion, “Learn, my son, to have
faith and hope in the Lord, for no one who faithfully serves God can ever
perish with hunger As he spoke, an eagle flew past and rested upon the bank of
a river which was near. It had caught a large fish, which it yielded to the
young boy. Cuthbert, with that tender compassion to all God’s creatures, which
was another feature of his gentle nature, ordered him to give the bird its
share of the feast. The young lad did as he was commanded; and cutting the fish
into two parts, gave one to the eagle, and brought back the remainder, upon
which he and his master refreshed themselves “with a most agreeable feast”.
One
more story connected with his apostolic life, and we shall pass from scenes so
interesting and so instructing. Once, in his wanderings through the western
districts of Berwickshire, he came to the house of a certain devout woman
named Kenspid, who, as mentioned before, had been his
nurse from the first years of his boyhood, and whom he often visited, not only
through the affection he bore to her, but on account of her virtuous life.
Whilst he was preaching to the people of the village in which she resided, and
which is supposed to be Wrangholm, between the Leader
and the Tweed, a fire broke out, and raged with such violence, owing to the
prevalence of a high wind, that it endangered not only the house of his
foster-mother, but all the houses in the street. St. Cuthbert, seeing the
imminent danger to which those whom he loved were exposed, fell upon the ground
upon his face, and whilst he prayed the wind suddenly changed, and the flames
were quenched.
St.
Cuthbert was now upwards of thirty-two years old, and had worn the religious
habit for twelve years. They had been years spent in the exact observance of
all the rules of the monastic life, and sanctified by the fervent exercise of
the evangelical virtues of poverty, humility, obedience, and an eminent spirit
of prayer, and by the laborious active duties of an apostolic life. He was now
to enter upon a new sphere, involving a change not so much of action as of
place. He was appointed Prior of the Monastery of Lindisfarne.
LINDISFARNE.
Oh, happy in their soul’s high solitude
Who commune thus with God, And not with earth.
—Cardinal Newman,
To him the mourners came,
And
sinners bound by Satan. At his touch
Their
chains fell from them light as summer dust»
Each
word he spake was as a sacrament
Clothed
with God’s grace.
—Aubrey de Vele,
INTRODUCTION
OF CHRISTIANITY INTO THE NORTH-ST. OSWALD AND ST. AIDAN.
BEFORE
entering upon the history of St. Cuthbert’s connection with Lindisfarne, it
will be necessary to give some account of that celebrated monastery and church,
and of the introduction of Christianity into the north of England.
In
the year 617, Edwin succeeded to the throne of Northumbria. He and his people
were still pagans, but in the nth year of his reign he married the daughter of
the Catholic. King, Ethelbert of Kent. The young Queen was accompanied to York
by St. Paulinus, whom Archbishop Justus of Canterbury had raised to the
episcopal dignity. This holy Bishop by his preaching converted Edwin, and on
Easter Sunday, in the year 627, the King was baptised at York in the Church of St. Peter the Apostle, which he himself had built of
timber. His subjects in the provinces of Deira and Bernicia followed the
example of their monarch, and were received into the Church in great numbers by
St. Paulinus, who was made Archbishop of York—the pallium being sent to him by
Pope Honorius I, with letters addressed to him and to the King. Before the
letter of the Roman Pontiff reached York, King Edwin had been slain in the
battle of Hatfield, in Yorkshire, in October of 633, and the pagan King Penda
of Mercia and the apostate Cadwalla had divided the
kingdom of Northumbria between them. By their influence the infant Church was
destroyed, and St. Paulinus was obliged to seek safety in flight. After a year,
in which the land had been given up to paganism, and was tyrannised over by the savage Cadwalla, all eyes were turned to
Oswald, who, by the death of his brother Eanfrid, had
become the rightful heir to the Northumbrian throne. Oswald was now thirty
years old. Since the death of his father Ethelfrid,
the grandson of Ina, and almost since his childhood, he had resided in exile
with many of the nobles attached to his race, and had been trained in the
Catholic faith by the monks of Iona. There is something extremely beautiful and
noble about the character of this truly saintly Saxon King. He was gentle and
humble and chaste, overflowing with kindness to the poor and distressed. “He
was a prince of men, one born to attract a general enthusiasm of admiration,
reverence, and love.” Oswald advanced into Northumbria at the head of an army,
small indeed in numbers, but strengthened with the faith of Christ. He
encountered the overwhelming force of Cadwalla at a
place called Denis Burn—that is, the brook of Denis, not far from Hexham, and
near to the Picts’ wall on the north. On the night of the battle Oswald
erected, with his own hands, on the summit of the hill which was occupied by
his followers, a large wooden cross. Standing before this emblem of our
salvation, he thus addressed his soldiers: “Let us all kneel and together
beseech the true and living God Almighty to defend us from the haughty and
fierce enemy, for He knows that our cause is just, and that we fight for the
safety of our nation”. The army spent the night in prayer, and with the first
dawn of day advanced towards the enemy, and obtained a complete and glorious
victory.
The
place where the battle was fought was henceforth called Hefenfelth,
or the Heavenly Field. A chapel dedicated to St. Oswald marks the spot, a
little to the north of Hexham, and of the railway from Newcastle to Carlisle.
For centuries afterwards the brethren of the Church of Hexham were accustomed
to make a yearly pilgrimage to this place, and on the spot where Oswald had
reared the standard of the Holy Cross, said Mass for the soul of the great
Saxon King. In the time of St. Bedua a church
dedicated to St. Oswald was built here by the monks of Hexham.
As
soon as Oswald was established on his father’s throne, his first thought was to
bring back to his people the precious treasure of the faith which they had
lost. It was natural that he should turn to that spot where he had spent his
youth and to those who had been his instructors in his exile. He therefore
earnestly entreated the monks of Iona to send him some holy Bishop or
missionary to preach to his subjects. They at once complied with his request
and after a short delay, caused by the failure of the first monk that was sent,
St. Aidan was appointed to undertake the great work of the conversion of
Northumbria. This holy monk is described by Bede as a man of singular meekness
and piety and moderation, zealous for the cause of God. If we are to believe
the ancient Irish records, before joining the community at Iona, he had
enrolled himself in his youth among the religious ot the Island Monastery of St. Senanus at Inniscattery on the Shannon.
There
is another venerable tradition which says that before he left Ireland he was
raised to the Episcopate, and in the old register of the Diocese of Clogher, he
is named among the Bishops of that see. Dr. John Lynch, in his MS. History of
the Irish Bishops, as also Ware and Cotton, following the testimony of this
authentic record, have placed St. Aidan fifth in succession from St. Molaisse, whose death is recorded in the annals of Ulster
in the year 563. St. Aidan was united with the Catholic Church throughout the
world in obedience to the See of Rome, but owing to their isolation from the
rest of Christendom, since the Roman conquest of Britain, he had retained, in
common with his brethren at Iona, the ancient cycle which the Irish Church had
received with St. Patrick. It was the cycle followed at Rome at the time he was
sent by Pope Celestine to evangelise the Irish, but
during the two centuries which had elapsed since then, the Roman Church had
gradually perfected the Easter computation.
“It
was,’’ as Archbishop Moran pertinently observes, “the astronomical science and
not the faith of Ireland and St. Aidan that was at fault.” In spite of these
facts, it is somewhat disheartening to see with what persistency Protestant
writers try to persuade themselves and their readers that there were doctrinal
differences between the Celtic and the Roman Churches.
It
was in the summer of the year 635 that Aidan arrived at the court of Oswald. He
was cordially welcomed by the saintly King, who gave him the choice of any spot
he wished to select for his episcopal see from the Tees to the Frith of Forth.
St. Aidan chose for his cathedral and home the Island of Lindisfarne, now
called Holy Island. Many reasons, no doubt, weighed with the Saint in selecting
the spot. In the first place, it was protected by its insular position from
sudden attacks. Secondly, it was within a short sail of the royal castle
crowning the grey cliff of Bamborough, built by King Ina.
This
fortress rock, so striking an object in the view from the heugh or platform of
basalt, below which the Church and Monastery of Lindisfarne were sheltered,
impregnable by position and strengthened by art, was then the chief residence
of the Kings of Northumbria. But another reason would have special influence on
the mind of Aidan. Here he would be able, in the intervals of his Episcopal labours, to find that solitude and retirement so dear to
the heart of every true religious; and the outward features of the island,
lying bare and desolate in the German Ocean, would constantly remind him of his
first home, on the waters of the Shannon, and of the sea-girt Iona, of which
the glories were now to be perpetuated on Anglo-Saxon soil.
DESCRIPTION
OF THE ISLAND OF LINDISFARNE, NOW HOLY ISLAND.
LINDISFARNE,
or Holy Island, has often been described, and is well known to many of my
readers, but for the sake of those for whom I mainly write, and to whom the
costly works of Raine and Eyre are not accessible, and because it is a pleasure
to me to speak of it, and that I have some claim to do so, I will endeavour to describe the salient features of the place and
its surroundings.
Let
my readers picture to themselves a long, low, flat length of land, girt at its
southern extremity by a belt of basaltic rock, while at the northern end a long
projecting neck of sand stretches far into the sea, lying off the eastern coast
of Northumbria, opposite Beal, about seven miles south of Berwick. It is not
always an island, for twice every day it is accessible on foot. The pathway
through the sands, which has been traversed by the feet of holy men and
innumerable pilgrims, and which extends below Beal Farm to the middle of the
island, is three miles in length. During low water, a wide and dreary waste of
sand, weird and desolate, across which the northern blasts sweep irresistibly,
and where no object meets the eye but the passing seagull, nor the ear but the
loud roar of the billows breaking on the rocks which line the north-eastern
shore, forms a fitting approach to a spot so sacred and venerable. Nearly half
the island is now under cultivation ; the rest is covered with sand blown into
fantastic shapes by many a wintry storm, through which the long thick wiry bent
shoots up luxuriantly.
The
length of the island from north to south, including a peninsula called the
Snook, is about two miles and three quarters: its breadth from east to west a
mile and a half. The harbour is extensive and safe
except during heavy gales of wind from the westward.
The
town of Holy Island consists of a few irregular streets branching off from the
market-place. These small streets had, all of them, names from an early period;
viz., Prior Rawe, Mary-gate, Piet-hill, Northstreet,
Cross-gate, Church-lane, Crosse- market, Palace-gate, Fenkle-street,
Lea-sheite, Middle-sheite,
Smales-garth, Combs-sheite. These names occur in the
Roll of 1592. Broad-street, Southbaggot, North-baggot (Back-gate), East-baggot,
Baggot-heugh, Cuddy’s-wall, St. Combs, Coldingham-walls,
&c., &c., are mentioned in a survey of the property of the Dean and
Chapter of Durham in 1622. St. Combs was originally a Chapel dedicated to St.
Columba, but it is difficult to fix the locality of this Chapel and of the
Cemetery originally attached to it.
The
chief objects of interest on the island are the fine ruins of the Priory, the
early English Parish Church, and the Castle. For a detailed description of
these I must refer my readers to Raine’s North Durham. In one point he seems to
be inaccurate. He states that there are no remains of a period anterior to the
Conquest, save perhaps a small carved stone built up in the staircase of the
north-west tower of the Priory Church. But undoubtedly the lower portions of
the walls of the choir, and probably the foundations of the apse, and the
walls of the north transept and aisle are of Saxon workmanship, possibly
remnants of the original Saxon Church pulled down to make way for its Norman
successor.
It
is impossible for any Catholic to visit this spot without being deeply moved,
for here was the cradle of northern Christianity; here stood the first church
of the whole district between York and Edinburgh; here, for well-nigh 900
years, a body of holy religious served God in solitude and prayer; and from
here went forth the saintly Bishops and zealous missionaries who preached the
faith to our wild and barbarous ancestors, and subdued the fierce Northmen to
the sweet yoke of the gospel of Jesus Christ. I may be pardoned for speaking of
myself in connection with a place so dear to me, and so intimately associated
with the whole of my priestly life.
On
my first leaving college, the island formed a portion of my extensive parish,
and during the happy years of youthful enthusiasm, I constantly visited it in
every state of the tide, and in every variety of season. Sometimes trudging
across the sands barefooted, like the pilgrims of old, sometimes on horseback,
or in a carriage or boat. More than once I have been called to attend a sick or
dying parishioner when the night was so dark that I could only trace the safe
track by feeling my way from post to post, placed as a guide to the
inexperienced traveller, often with the water up to
my saddle-girths, or the axles of the carriage wheels. Since then my connection
with the island has never ceased, at one time renting a cottage there for
several years; and now I am writing these lines under my own roof, within sight
of the ruins of the venerable Abbey Church—
“A
solemn, huge, and dark-red pile,
Placed
on the margin of the isle ”.
In
the life of St. Godric of Finchale, written by
Reginald of Durham, it is narrated that he was accustomed in his wanderings as
a pedlar to visit Holy Island, and travel over the
whole of the ground consecrated by the feet of St. Cuthbert, kneeling and
kissing the spots pointed out by the monks, where the Saint himself had knelt
and prayed. Following in the footsteps of the hermit of Finchale,
I too have traversed again and again every inch of this sacred soil; walking
and reciting the canonical hours on the stretch of smooth sand which extends
along the west and north-east shores, and where, as Ven. Bede tells us, St.
Cuthbert spent the nights in singing the praises of God; or watching the long
waves of the German Ocean slowly advancing and receding, or, in wild fury,
dashing their foam over the rocks; or lying on the smooth soft green turf which
carpets the Heugh, and gazing, with straining eyes, upon the distant Fame,
where the Saint gave up his pure soul to God.
I
love the people, bereft, alas! of the precious gift of the faith, but sturdy
and independent, honest, intelligent, and kind-hearted, “plain folk and
primitive, made courteous by traditions old and a cerulean sky”; and to me the
place possesses an indescribable charm, not merely for the memories which cling
around it, but I love the—
Beauty
and solitude, and simple ways,
The
quiet shining hills, the long lythe wave,
Now
white-fringed, fretting into rough curved bays,
Now
whirling smoothly where the flat sand gave
A
couch, whereon to end its stormy days
The
island is commonly said to derive its original name from the Lindis or Low, a
small liver which flows from the Cheviots, through the sands which separate the
island from the mainland; but probably its true derivation, or rather that of
the territory of which it forms a part, is the land between the river Lindis
and the Warren, easily convertible into Farren, a river falling into the sea
north of Bamborough. Bede always speaks of it as the Lindisfarnensian Island, or the island in the Lindisfarnensian territory. Its present name of Holy Island it owes to the veneration which our
forefathers in the faith entertained for the saintly lives and glorious deaths
of the confessors and martyrs who had made the island illustrious.
We
know nothing of the fabric either of church or monastery erected by St. Aidan.
It could only have been a temporary edifice, for St. Finan, his successor in
the Bishopric, built a new church, more suitable for a cathedral, and after
the manner of Scotland?' It was formed of wooden planks, and thatched w’ith reeds, or the wiry bent which grows so abundantly on
the island. It was consecrated by Archbishop Theodore of Canterbury, and
dedicated to the Prince of the Apostles. This was the church attached to the
monastery (no doubt of similar construction) of which St. Cuthbert was
appointed Prior.
ST.
CUTHBERT MADE PRIOR OF LINDISFARNE.
I
MUST now mention the circumstances which led to the transfer of St. Cuthbert
from Mailros to Lindisfarne. In the year 664, a
conference, arranged by King Oswin, was held at Whitby, to settle the long-disputed
controversy respecting the observance of the festival of Easter. St. Wilfrid
was the spokesman on the side of the usage of the Roman Church, which was that
of the rest of Christendom. Colman, the third Bishop of Lindisfarne in
succession to St. Aidan, was the representative of the Scottish party.
We
are indebted to Ven. Bede for an account of the discussion which took place at
this conference. King Oswin opened the proceedings by earnestly advocating
uniformity of practice amongst those who together served God, and then called
upon Bishop Colman to state what the rite was that he observed, and whence it
derived its origin. Colman with quiet dignity alleged in defence of the Scottish custom—first, the example of St. John the Evangelist, who was
said to have kept Easter on the fourteenth day of the lunar month; second, the
Paschal Canons of Anatolius, who ordered it to be kept on the same day; third,
the practice of St. Columba and his successors in the Isle of Iona, from whom
he received it together with his mission as Bishop. Wilfrid, in answer, said
that Colman was in error in respect to St. John, who, in deference to the
prejudices of the Jews, kept the feast as they did, on the fourteenth day,
whether it were a Sunday or not, whereas the Scots kept it only on that day
when it happened to fall on a Sunday; neither could he appeal to the Paschal
Canons of Anatolius, for Anatolius followed a cycle of nineteen years, which
the Scots did not.
“As
to your Father Columba and his disciples,” he said, “I do not deny that they
were servants of God and beloved by Him, and that they loved Him with rustic
simplicity, but pious intentions. I do not think that such keeping of Easter
was very prejudicial to them, so long as none came to show them how they might
follow a more perfect rule. If a Catholic adviser had come among them, they
would, doubtless, have followed his counsel, as they are known to have kept
those commandments of God which they knew. But, as for you and your companions,
you are, without doubt, in fault, if, after having heard the decrees of the
Apostolic See, and of the universal Church, you refuse to follow them. Even
admitting the sanctity of your Fathers, the authority of a small body, in an
obscure isle in the Scottish sea, is surely not to be preferred to that of the
universal Church throughout the world. Columba might have been a great man, but
Peter was a greater, on whom our Lord built His Church, and to whom He gave the
keys of the kingdom of heaven.” Wilfrid was carried away by the ardour and impetuousity of his
character, and some of his statements were scarcely accurate. There was no
decree of the universal Church or of the Apostolic See condemning the Celtic
usage.
The
observance of the Easter festival was simply a matter of discipline, not of
doctrine; and, though the Roman Church had abandoned her original tradition,
the successors of St. Peter, with wise and prudent moderation, had allowed its
general acceptance to be the result of its own intrinsic merits, without enforcing
it by any special decree. The reference to the authority of St. Peter, however,
made a deep impression on the mind of Oswin.
“Is it true, Colman, that these words were spoken to Peter by
our Lord?” “It is true, O King,” was the answer. Then said the King—“Can you
show any such power given to your Columba?” Colman answered, “None”. Then added
the King— “Do you both agree that these words were spoken to Peter, and that
the keys of the kingdom of heaven were given to him by the Lord?” They both
answered “We do”. Then the King gave his decision—“I also say unto you that he
is the doorkeeper of heaven, whom I will not contradict; but as far as I know I
am able, I desire in all things to obey his decrees, lest, when I come to the
gates of heaven, there be none to open them, he being my adversary who is
proved to have the keys All present applauded the King’s decision, and,
renouncing the more imperfect institution, hastened to conform to that which
was better. But though the question was unanimously decided against Colman, he
and several of his brethren were unwilling to lay aside the custom derived from
their Fathers. He resigned his see, and returned to Iona, whence he originally
came.
At
the request of Bishop Colman, the Monastery of Lindisfarne was given by the
King to the community at Mailros. Fata, who had been
trained by St. Aidan, was made Abbot of both monasteries. Knowing the merit and
tried virtue of Cuthbert, Eata sent him to preside as Prior over the Lindisfarne
Monastery, “there to teach the rules of monastic perfection, both by his
authority and the example of his virtues St. Cuthbert, by order of the Abbot,
composed a rule for the Anglo-Saxon monks, and to this new rule was shortly
afterwards added the rule of St. Benedict. In his new home, the life led by
Cuthbert differed in nothing from that which for twelve years he had led at Mailros. During his first years of office, he met with some
unpleasantness from several of his monks, who, with national obstinacy, refused
to accept the new constitutions introduced by him. These he overcame by the
quiet power of bis patience, never manifesting any resentment at the opposition
which he encountered; but, with placid mind and unruffled countenance,
bearing with the rude remarks uttered against him, he brought his opponents, by
little and little, to a better disposition.
So
great was the fervour of our Saint, that he found the
days too short for his devotion, and oftentimes spent whole nights in watching
and prayer. Whilst the brethren slept, he would wander round the island to
keep himself awake, reciting the praises of God. When he said Mass, such was
the ardour of his faith in the divine mysteries, that
he could hardly pronounce the words of the missal, on account of his sobs and
tears.
The
remembrance of the sacred passion of our Blessed Lord so deeply touched his
heart, that in union with the great Victim of our salvation he would offer his
life to God in reparation for the sins of men. When he assisted in his stall in
the choir at High Mass, and the words “Sursum Corda” were chanted by the
priest, so vehemently was his soul attracted towards heaven, that the response,
“Habemus ad Dominum”—“We
have them lifted to the Lord”—came from his lips rather in groans than in the
natural tones of his voice.
His
tenderness for the poor and for sinners, a true characteristic of the Saints,
was so great, that when his penitents were confessing to him he shed tears of
compassion over them, and by taking upon himself the penance their sins
merited, he brought them to a knowledge of their guilt, and led them to
repentance by the persuasive force of his example. The fame of his saintly
life, like a sweet perfume, spread itself beyond the bounds of his monastery.
Persons of every condition of life came from far and near to cast themselves at
his feet, and seek light and counsel in their trials and sorrows.
“No
one,” says Symeon, “went away from him without the joy of consolation—no one
took back with him the grief of mind which he had brought into his presence.”
Cuthbert’s labours were not confined to the island.
Like St. Aidan, he travelled from house to house, over the moorlands and bleak
hills of Northumberland, instructing the people and winning all hearts, as he
had done in Scotland, by his charity and his gentle ways. He had one great
advantage over his saintly predecessor, that he could converse with the country
people in their own language, which was his native tongue, and with the peculiarities
of which he had become familiar amidst the marshes of Teviotdale; whereas St.
Aidan, when he preached to the English, was obliged to avail himself of the
services of the holy King Oswald, who acted as his interpreter.
BEGINS
A SOLITARY LIFE IN ST. CUTHBERT’S ISLAND.
SO
another twelve years passed away peaceably and uneventfully, and Cuthbert had
well-nigh reached his fortieth year. His heart was not fully at rest. Not
content with the austerity and seclusion of a monastic life and the labours of a missionary, he was ever longing after still
greater perfection, and more perfect solitude. Therefore in the year 676, with
the blessing and permission of the Abbot Eata and the good wishes of his
brethren, the man of God withdrew from the monastery and entered upon his life
as an Anchorite.
In
the first instance, he selected a spot not far removed from the monastery. This
was the small island since known as St. Cuthbert’s Island, for not only has a
constant tradition handed down to us that this was the place chosen, but Bede
expressly states that it was surrounded on all sides by the sea. The island is
separated about a stone’s throw from the shore, and at high water is entirely
cut off from it by the waves. At the low tide it can be reached on foot, by
cautiously stepping over the rocks, made slippery by a layer of sea-weed. In
aftertimes there was a chapel, dedicated to St. Cuthbert, built upon a portion
of the basaltic rock, which extends from the island to the elevated ridge which
runs along to the southern front of the monastic ruins. The outline of this
chapel can be traced, as the walls are still slightly raised above the
foundations. Here, before the dissolution of the Priory, holy Mass was daily
offered at an altar, adorned with statues of St. Cuthbert and St. Thomas of
Canterbury.
FARNE
Thus
recluse
The
man lived on in vision, still of God
Through
contemplation known : and as the shades
Each
other chase all day o’er steadfast hills,
Even
so, athwart that Vision unremoved,
Forever
rushed the tumults of this world,
Man’s
fleeting life, the rise and fall of states,
While
changeless measured change ; the spirit of prayer
Fanning
that wondrous picture oft to flame,
Until
the glory grew insufferable.
Long
years thus lived he.
—Aubrey de Verb.
RETIRES
TO FARNE.
CUTHBERT
did not remain long in this retreat. Probably he found it was too near to the
Priory and the mainland to allow of that entire solitude which his soul yearned
after, for he had often said to his brethren “that, were it possible that I
could hide myself in ever so narrow a cell, upon a cliff where the waves of the
swelling ocean should gird me around on every side, and shut me out from the
sight as well as the knowledge of all men, not even then should I think myself
free from the snares of this deceitful world but then also should I dread lest
covetousness should tempt me to leave my retreat, or suggest some cause or
other to lure , me away”
“Aiming,
therefore, at higher things” and more perfect seclusion remote from the eyes of
all, he sailed to the Island of Fame. This island, a conspicuous object in the
sea view, is the largest of a picturesque group of islands, twenty-three in
number, lying off the coast to the eastward, nearly opposite Bamborough, and
surrounded on all sides by the deep and boundless ocean. It lies, “like the
broken and defenceless hull of a shipwrecked vessel,”
exposed to the wild fury of the terrific storms which sweep along this
dangerous coast. It is situated about seven miles distant from Holy Island,
two from Bamborough, and two and a half from North Sunderland. It is about
eleven acres in extent, of which, at the present time, five are in grass, the
rest is solid rock.
This
island had an evil reputation as the haunt of unclean spirits, and no human
being had ever ventured to reside there, though it had been occasionally
occupied by St Aidan, who retired there to pray. It had no convenience of any
kind to fit it for a human habitation. It was without water, fruits, or trees.
By his prayers St. Cuthbert obtained a supply of water from the rock, and with
his own hands, as we shall see later, raised a scanty crop of barley. At its
southern extremity, a rugged block of basaltic rock rises to a height of 80
feet, and extending laterally to W. and E., hems in two sides of the island
with a jagged and solid wall. On the other side, towards the ocean, a gentle
slope falls to the water’s edge, and there Cuthbert reared his humble
dwelling-place.
Both
Bede and Symeon have left us a minute description of the building, if building
it can be called. It was nearly circular in shape, and measured from wall to
wall about four or five perches. The wall itself externally, was higher than
the stature of a man; but internally it was much higher, the solid rock being
scooped out by the Saint, so that he could see nothing but the blue sky above
him, that thus “the whole bent of his mind might be turned to heavenly desires
The wall was constructed, not of hewn stones, nor of bricks, but of turf and
unwrought stones, which were dug out of the foundations.
The
roof was formed of rough beams and thatched with straw. Within the walls there
were only two compartments — an oratory and a cell. At the landing-place,
however, Cuthbert erected a larger house for the convenience of the brethren
and strangers who might come to visit him, and close to it was a fountain of
fresh water obtained by the prayers of the Saint. Having raised the buildings
with the aid of his brethren, Cuthbert after a brief period began to dwell
alone.
At
first, when the monks from Lindisfarne came to visit him, his charity led him
to go forth from his cell to minister to their wants. He would devoutly wash
their feet with warm water, and he, in his turn, sometimes was forced by their
importunity to take off his shoes and suffer them to wash his feet. After an
interval, he ceased even to go out to meet his visitors, but shut himself up in
his cell, merely conversing with those who came to him from his open window. In
course of time he gave up even this practice, and never showed himself or
opened his window except on special occasions, to give his blessing or for some
necessary act of charity.
In
this manner Cuthbert lived for eight years, subsisting on the produce of a
little field of barley, sown and reaped by his own hands—dividing his time, as
did the solitaries in the deserts of Egypt, between manual labour,
and prayer, and watchings, and fastings.
“There thou, O sweetest Father,” exclaims the pious historian of the Church of
Durham, in a transport of enthusiastic admiration, “ wast so much nearer to God as thou wert farther from the world and its clamorous
anxieties; there thou, O most holy and revered, along with Mary, didst sit at
the feet of the Lord, having chosen that better part, which shall be thine for
ever ; there thy thirsting soul desired access to God, the fountain of living
waters, and fainted for the courts of the Lord’s house; there thy flesh and thy
heart rejoiced in the living God, and didst taste and see how sweet the Lord
was, and thou wast blessed, because thy hope was in
Him. With what earnestness, with how many sighs of love, with what affection,
with what repentance, and with how many tears didst thou wish, and ask, and’
entreat, and exclaim with the prophet: ‘ Lord, I have loved the beauty of Thine
house, and the place where Thy glory dwelleth’ (Ps. xxv. 8). For setting aside
all other desires, his whole life expressed only this prayer : ‘ One thing I
have asked of the Lord, this will I seek after, that I may dwell in the house
of the Lord all the days of my life’ (Ps. xxvi. 4). And so thou, blessed among
the blessed, didst dwell in the house of the Lord, and there shalt praise Him
for ever and ever.”
But
the more our Saint tried to fly from the conversation of men, and hide himself
in the deepest solitude, the more did God manifest his sanctity, and proclaim
his virtues before the eyes of the whole world. Not only from Northumbria, but
from all parts of Great Britain, pilgrims came to see him, to confess their
sins to him, and to seek light in their doubts, guidance in their difficulties,
and comfort in their sorrows. Their confidence in the Saint was well repaid, “
for no one,” says St. Bede, “departed from him without the joy of consolation,
and the sorrow of mind which each man brought with him accompanied him no more
in his departure”. For Cuthbert knew how to refresh the mourner with pious
exhortation; he knew how to remind those that were in tribulation of the joys
of heavenly life, and to show that both the smiles and the frowns of this world
are equally transient; and he was skilled in revealing to those that were
tempted the manifold wiles of the old enemy. He showed how readily the soul
that was void of brotherly or divine love might be taken prisoner, and how he
that walked in the strength of divine faith might pass safely through the
snares of the adversary, with the Lord’s assistance, as through the threads of
a spider’s web. “How often,” he said, “have they cast me headlong from the
lofty rocks! How often have they hurled stones at me, as if to slay me I How
often have they raised up fantastic temptations of one kind or another to
frighten me, and attempted to drive me from this place of contest! Yet, nevertheless,
they have never been able to inflict any injury upon any body, nor touch my
mind with fear.”
COMPANIONSHIP
WITH THE WILD BIRDS ON FARNE.
THE
story of his life at Farne would not be complete if I
did not tell of one tender and touching trait in the Saint’s character—his
familiar relations with the animal creation.
In
the beginning, God gave to man dominion over all created things, “the fishes
of the sea, and the fowls of the air, and the beasts, and the whole earth, and
every creeping thing that moveth upon the earth”. But
when man by sin rebelled against his Creator, then all creatures rebelled
against him, and refused to serve him. The original relations between the
highest of God’s creatures upon the earth, and the lower creation, though
forfeited by the children of Adam, seem in some instances to have been
restored, and more than one great Saint has exercised a marvellous power and influence over animals, and birds, and fishes.
We
read how, in the amphitheatres of Rome, savage and
untamed beasts have been suddenly arrested in their wild onslaught by the calm
bearing and innocence of the early martyrs, and, laying aside their ferocity,
have couched at the feet of those they were let loose to devour; and I know of
no narratives more beautiful and affecting than the accounts which his
biographers have left of the wonderful ascendency which the seraphic St.
Francis exercised over irrational creatures, and the loving intercourse between
the Saint and them. These memories still live amongst the citizens of Perugia
and Assisi, and the simple peasants of the Umbrian plains. Love had transformed
the heart of Francis (these are the words of his latest biographer), even as
amongst the Saints, that each word was as a word of love. He gave to the sun,
the stars, to animals, the sweet name of brother and sister. He invites them
all (as the great prophet of old invited fire, hail, snow, and storms, and all
animals, from the crawling reptile to the bird winging its way through the pure
air), to praise the goodness of their common Master, and to testify their
gratitude to Him; and they heard his voice, they understood his language, they
felt his power, they paid homage to him, as they paid it to Adam, who had a
divine commission to rule the world. Let us hear what St. Bonaventure says in
recalling these wondrous facts.
When
the servant of God, warned by St. Clare and Sylvester of the designs of heaven,
set out on his way, he came to a place where a number of birds of all kinds
were assembled. He ran towards them with joy, and saluted them as if they were
reasonable beings. They all listened and turned towards him. When he got
nearer, they bent their heads under the branches of the trees and fixed their
eyes on him. Then he admonished them to listen to the Word of God with
attention, and said to them, “My brothers the birds, you ought to praise your
Creator, who has given you feathers for a covering, wings to fly with, pure air
for your dwelling place, and who feeds you without any solicitude on your own
part As he spoke, the birds testified their joy: they stretched forward their
necks, they clapped their wings and opened their beaks, steadfastly looking at
the servant of God. Francis, full of fervour, passed
through them, brushing them often with his habit, yet not one of them was
afraid. After he had given them his blessing, and signed them with the Cross,
he gave them leave to go, and the whole flock flew away.
On
another occasion, when a man presented the Saint with a hare, placing it on tl e ground at his feet, at the invitation of the loving
father it jumped on to his breast. He pressed it to his heart with the
tenderness of a mother, warning it not to let itself be caught again, and
giving it leave to go, then gently placed it on the ground; but no sooner was
it free than it jumped back into the tender arms, till at length Francis gave
it to one of his brothers to carry into a quiet and sheltered place.
During
a voyage on the lake of Rieti a fisherman gave him a sea-bird which he had
caught. Francis accepted it with pleasure, and holding it in his hand, invited
it to fly away, but the bird would not move. Then Francis, raising his eyes to
heaven, prayed long in a kind of ecstasy, and on coming to himself, as if from
a dream, he ordered the bird to fly away and employ its voice in praising God.
After this fresh order, and having received the blessing of the Saint, it
fluttered its wings as a sign of joy, and flew away.
These
charming legends will have paved the way for the equally touching stories of
the loving intercourse between the gentle Anchorite of Fame and the wild birds
that then, as now, frequented these solitary ocean islands. As soon as the crop
of barley sown’ by Cuthbert appeared above the ground, the birds came in flocks
to devour it. The Saint advanced towards them and thus addressed them : “Why do
you touch the grain which you have not sown ? Do you think that you have more
need of it than I ? If, nevertheless, you have obtained leave from God to do this,
do what He allows you; but if not, depart, and do no injury to the goods of
another.” At his words the birds at once flew away, and never afterwards
molested his harvest.
On
another occasion, noticing that two crows who had been accustomed to settle on
the island tore with their beaks the straw and thatch from the roof of the hospitium, or guest-house, in order to build their nests,
he checked them by a gentle movement of his hand, and then, in the name of
Jesus Christ, bade them depart, and no longer presume to remain on the island.
The birds at once obeyed his voice and mournfully flew away. After three days
one of them returned, and approaching the venerable servant of God, with
drooping wings and humble mien, and faint cries, and bowing its head, seemed to
solicit forgiveness for its fault. The Saint, at once understanding its
appeal, gave them leave again to return to the island, which the bird and its
companion joyfully did, bringing in token of gratitude a suitable gift to the
venerable Father. For many subsequent years the birds remained on the island,
and built their nests without even venturing to touch the Saint’s property.
There
were then, as there are now, vast numbers of sea-fowl who resorted to the
islands to breed. Amongst these the eider ducks deserve particular notice from
their intimate connection with the Saint. For centuries they have been known as
St. Cuthbert’s ducks.* He lavished upon them special marks of kindness and
affection. They were frequently his sole companions during the long hours of
his solitary nights, clustering round him when he watched and prayed on the
rocks which surrounded his home. They obeyed his every word, and became so tame
and familiar with him that they would allow him to approach them at all times
without fear and caress them with his hand. He gave them full liberty to come
and go and build their nests and rear their offspring—confining them, for this
purpose, to certain localities of the island. They flew to him when in danger,
and no one presumed to molest them whilst under his protection. As long as
the Saint lived they abode within sight of his cell in peace and security and
loving trust.
VISITS
THE ABBESS ELFLEDA AT COQUET ISLAND.
IN
the year 684 (the last of his first residence on the Fame), his solitude was
interrupted for a brief space by a memorable interview, which took place
between him and the venerable and saintly Elfleda, the Abbess of St. Hilda’s
Monastery at Whitby. She was of royal descent on both sides of her pedigree,
her father being Oswin, King of Bernicia, and her mother Eanfleda,
daughter of Edwin, King of Deira. Some time before the meeting with St.
Cuthbert, she had experienced the efficiency of his miraculous power. As she
herself informed Herefrid, priest of the Church at
Lindisfarne, from whom Ven. Bede heard the story, she had almost entirely lost
the use of her limbs, so as to be unable to walk, or stand upright, or move
except on all-fours. In this distressing state she had recourse, mentally, to
the name of the holy Anchorite Cuthbert, feeling convinced that, if she could
but obtain something belonging to him, she would be healed. God made known her
wish to the Saint, for, not long after, a messenger arrived at the monastery,
with a linen girdle which Cuthbert had sent to her. Full of joy and confidence,
she girt herself round with it, and next morning was restored to perfect
health.
By
her earnest entreaty, the man of God consented to meet her. The place fixed
upon for this meeting was the Island of Coquet, opposite the mouth of the river
of that name, about a mile from Amble, where there is now a Catholic mission,
and about twenty miles south of Fame. Upon the island is still to be seen a
fragment of the monastic ruin. Cuthbert, accompanied by some of the brethren
from Lindisfarne, sailed from Fame, and met Elfleda at the large monastery
which then existed on the island. After having conversed together for a short
time, Cuthbert answering the many questions put to him, the royal Abbess made
known to him the real motive which had induced her to seek for this interview.
Suddenly she fell upon her knees before the servant of God, and adjured him, by
the “ venerable name of the heavenly King and His angels,” to tell her how long
King Egfrid, her brother, should live and reign over the kingdom of the Angles?
It was not through idle curiosity that she asked this question. A great crisis
in the state seemed to be near at hand. The long struggle between the kings of
Bernicia and Mercia had weakened the Northumbrian kingdom, and now the savage
Picts were invading it from the north. Egfrid’s ambitious and restless
character was well known to her, and she was anxious to learn from Cuthbert
what was to be the termination of the war in which he was now embarked, and the
fate of the brother whom he loved so well. “I know,” she said, “that, from the
spirit of prophecy which you possess so abundantly, you can do this, if you
wish.” Cuthbert at first tried to evade her question, but the Abbess pressed
him, with tears, to tell her the truth. Thus entreated, the Saint revealed to
her that her royal brother would not outlive the year. “Who, then,” she
exclaimed, “will succeed him, as he has neither children nor brother?”
Cuthbert remained silent for a short time, and then replied: “Say not that he
is without children, for he shall have a successor, whom you may embrace with
sisterly affection”. “But,” continued Elfleda, “tell me, I beseech you, where
is he now?” “You see,” rejoined Cuthbert, “this wide and mighty ocean, with
how many islands it abounds. It is easy for God, from one of these, to provide
a ruler for the kingdom of the Angles.”
Then
Elfleda understood that he spoke of Aldfrid, who was said to be the son of
Egfrid’s father, and who at that time was living in exile in the Island of
Iona. Before the termination of their interview, Elfleda, knowing that her
royal brother intended to make Cuthbert a Bishop, urged him strongly to accept
the office. Remembering the prediction made to him on his death-bed by Boisil
at Mailros, Cuthbert made answer : “I know that I am
not worthy of so high a station; nevertheless, I cannot escape the decrees of
God. If it is His will that I should be subjected to such a burthen, I believe
that He will restore me to freedom shortly after; and perhaps, after not more
than two years, send me back to the rest of my beloved solitude. But I command
you, in the name of our Lord and Saviour, that you
tell this to no one till after my death.” After this they parted, and Cuthbert
returned to Farne.
EPISCOPATE.
As
the Apostle Paul,
Though
raised in raptures to the heaven of heavens,
Not
therefore loved his brethren less, but longed
To
give his life—his all—for Israel’s sake,
So
Cuthbert, loving God, loved man the more—
His
wont of old.
—Aubrey de Vbre,
ELECTED
BISHOP.
THE
prophetic words of Boisil and of our Saint were soon fulfilled, and that life
of an Anchorite, so calm and so sweet to the heart of Cuthbert, was now, for a
time at least, to come to an end. Whilst the Saint had been living for God
alone in solitude and prayer on his solitary rock in the midst of the ocean,
great events had occurred in the Church of Northumbria.
St.
Wilfrid, who had been appointed the spiritual ruler over the whole northern province,
had for many years administered his vast diocese with consummate prudence,
energy, and zeal. At length, in the year 678, a dispute arose between him and
King Egfrid, who had hitherto been his staunch friend and protector. In consequence
of this, Wilfrid was driven from his Bishopric, and, misled by the representations
of the King, Archbishop Theodore was prevailed upon to divide his great
diocese, and to consecrate two other Bishops at York, to preside over the two
new sees thus formed. Bosa was appointed to the province of Beira, and fixed
his Episcopal residence at York; and Eata, the Abbot of Lindisfarne, was made
Bishop of Hexham and Lindisfarne.
Some
time after, Theodore consecrated Tunbert to the
Church of Hexham, and Eata was confined to the See of Lindisfarne. Four years
later, for some act of disobedience, Tunbert was
deprived of his see; and a synod of Bishops, under the presidency of Theodore,
and at which King Egfrid was present, was held at Twiford (at the two fords),
in order to choose a successor to the Hexham Bishopric. There has been much
discussion as to the site of this place, but most probably it was situated at
Ain mouth, a small watering-place at the mouth of the Alne, about three miles
distant from the ancient town of Alnwick. At this synod Cuthbert was
unanimously chosen Bishop, and thus came to pass that event which he had so
long feared, and which the saintly Boisil had foretold, in sacred confidence,
to his beloved disciple more than forty years before.
When
the tidings of his election reached the venerable hermit, he resolutely refused
to leave his cell. Letters and messengers were sent to him in vain, until at
last the King himself and Bishop Trumwin, who had
been appointed Bishop of the Picts, and many noblemen and religious, together
with a deputation of the monks of Lindisfarne, sailed over to the Fame, and on
bended knees besought him, by our Lord, and with tears, to yield to their
entreaties; nor did they desist until they forced him to quit his beloved
seclusion, and dragged him before the synod. Overcome by their importunity, and
calling to mind the prophecy so often referred to, and fearing to resist the
will of Divine Providence, Cuthbert was at length compelled to give way, and,
shedding torrents of tears, bowed his neck to the yoke imposed upon him—a most
touching scene, worthy of the pencil of some great artist! As the winter was
approaching, his consecration was deferred, and Cuthbert was able once more,
for a season, to return to his solitary ways and life.
HIS
CONSECRATION AT YORK.
ON
the following Easter, which in that year (a.d. 685) fell on the 26th of March, the ceremony of
his consecration was performed at York, with much solemnity, by the Primate
Theodore, in the presence of the King and an immense concourse of Priests, and
with seven Bishops surrounding and assisting the Archbishop. Two months later,
on the 20th of May, Egfrid was slain in battle against the Picts, and Aldfrid,
his bastard brother, was raised to the throne in his stead.
After
his consecration, Cuthbert returned for a short time to the Fame to prepare
himself in solitude and prayer for the work of his Episcopacy. Thence he
proceeded to Mailros, where Eata, now Bishop of Lindisfarne,
was then staying. In that sacred spot, where they had spent so many happy years
together, these two holy Bishops mutually agreed to make an exchange of their
Episcopal sees. Eata chose Hexham, and Cuthbert was translated to the charge of
his beloved Lindisfarne.
King
Egfrid, before his death, bestowed upon the Saint, on the day of his
consecration at York, a large tract of land within the walls of the city, also
the villa of Craik, with a circuit of three miles around it, where he founded a
monastery, which afterwards gave shelter to his body, when its bearers were
flying from the Danes. In addition, the ancient Roman city of Lugubalia (now Carlisle) and the county adjoining was made
over to him. There he established a monastery of Nuns, and a school in which
clerics were trained for the service of the Church.
HIS
LIFE AS BISHOP—LABOURS AND MIRACLES.
THE
Episcopal dignity made but little change in the life of the blessed Cuthbert.
He still wore his monk’s garb, and taught the people committed to his charge as
of old, more by the eloquence of his saintly life than his words. He devoted
much time to prayer, earnestly supplicating grace for his flock; and in the
midst of his daily toils faithfully observed the regular hours and severe
austerities of the monastic life.
He
travelled mostly on foot through his vast diocese, which extended from the Tyne
to the Firth of Forth, penetrating into the defiles of the hills of
Northumberland, and the dense forests which then covered the valleys, in order
to preach to and instruct his people. “His whole episcopate,” says the
eloquent historian of the monks of the West, “seems to bear the character of a
mission indefinitely prolonged.”
In him the friendless and oppressed serfs found a protector
against the brutal violence of the lords. The poor and feeble, and those
afflicted with sorrow or sickness came to him as of yore, and from their gentle
and loving Bishop received consolation and aid. To the hungry he gave food, for
those who were wretchedly clad and without protection from the bitter winter
cold of those northern regions he provided clothes and warm covering. In a
word, he assiduously practised all the virtues of a
true pastor of souls. “In all things conforming,” says the Anonymous Monk, “to the doctrine of St. Paul to Timothy:‘It behoveth a Bishop to be blameless as the steward of God’
Nor
were miracles wanting to add lustre to his sanctity.
The venerable historian of his life has recorded many of those graces granted
to the prayers of this great servant of God. They were obtained for the most
part for the benefit of his people who were suffering from sickness or
calamity; and this is a feature which gives to them such an attractive beauty,
because they set before us in a strong
light the intense and active sympathy for human sorrow which was so deeply
impressed in the heart of St. Cuthbert. It is the fashion for modern criticism
to scoff at these miraculous gifts, and throw ridicule upon those who credit
them. But why should God’s arm be shortened, and why should He not do for His
faithful servants, and as a reward of the simple faith of His children, what He
did of old for His chosen people in the desert, or for the sick, and the lame,
and the blind, on the shores of Genesareth, or in the
streets of Jerusalem? But not solely because they testify to the heroic
sanctity of our Patron and Father, but because they contain many curious
details which throw light upon his episcopal life, and upon the customs and
manners of the times in which he lived, and bring out in strong relief the
simple but intense faith of the English of that day, some account of these will
prove of interest to my readers.
As
he was returning from his visit to Eata at Mailros,
mentioned in a former chapter, an earl attached to the Court of King Egfrid
earnestly besought him to turn aside from his journey to give his blessing to
his village and his household. On his arrival, the nobleman informed him of the
severe illness of one of his retainers, thanking God that the holy father had
been permitted to enter into his house. Cuthbert blessed some water, and sent
it to the sick man by one of the earl’s dependants,
who afterwards became a Priest of the Church of Lindisfarne, and was an
eye-witness of the miracle. No sooner had the sick man received some drops of
the blessed water into his mouth than he fell into a profound sleep, and on
wakening the next morning was restored to perfect health.
One
of his constant occupations as Bishop was to administer the holy Sacrament of
Confirmation. For this purpose he travelled from village to village,
instructing the rustic inhabitants, penetrating into the most wild and
mountainous districts; and oftentimes the people would assemble to meet him in
some open space, situated in the midst, and at equal distances from the small
hamlets, which were widely scattered through the surrounding country. Here the
people would encamp for whole days and nights around their Bishop, in huts
built of the boughs of trees, cut from the neighbouring forests. Once, whilst preaching for two whole days to the crowd which flocked
to him at one of these gatherings, and administering confirmation (“anointing
their forehead with the holy chrism”) to those whom he had recently baptised, a number of women appeared, bearing upon a litter
a young man, wasted with a long and grievous sickness. Setting down their
burthen at the outskirts of the forest in which the holy Bishop was standing,
they sent to ask permission to bring the sick man to receive the episcopal
blessing. When the youth had been brought into his presence, Cuthbert ordered
all to withdraw to some distance, and casting himself on his knees beside the
bier, he most earnestly prayed to God for his recovery. Then rising, he made
over him the sign of the cross, and immediately the malady, which had defied
the skill of many physicians, was driven away, and the young man rose from his
couch, and, after giving thanks to God, returned home rejoicing and in sound
health.
The
following narrative will give us an insight into the manner in which visitors
were received at the houses of the wealthy. On one of his numerous confirmation
tours Cuthbert arrived at the house of an earl, whose wife was lying
dangerously ill. The nobleman came out to meet his saintly guest, and on his
knees performed the usual hospitable rite of washing the hands and feet of his
visitor. When they were seated at table the earl made known to the Bishop the
illness of his wife, and, full of faith in the efficacy of the Saint’s prayers,
begged him to bless some water with which to sprinkle her “For I believe,” said
he, “that presently, by the gift of God she will be restored to health ; or, if
she die, that she will pass from death to everlasting life, and by dying
receive more speedily the recompense of her long and painful illness.”
Cuthbert, moved with compassion, did as he was requested, and sent water, which
he blessed, by the hands of one of his Priests, commanding him to sprinkle the
sick woman with it. On entering the bed-chamber, in which she lay like one half
dead, the Priest sprinkled her and the bed, and poured some drops of water into
her mouth. As soon as the blessed water touched the sick woman, who was quite
insensible, she was completely restored to health, both of mind and body, and,
rising from her bed, came forth and waited upon the holy Bishop.
The
account of the following miracle was given to Bede by the holy Priest Ethelwald, who accompanied the servant of God in his
journeys, and was an eyewitness of the event which he described. This Ethelwald was afterwards made Abbot of Mailros,
and, in 724, Bishop of Lindisfarne. He told that, as St. Cuthbert was, as
usual, traversing his diocese, preaching and giving confirm? tion, he came to a certain town called Bedesfield,
in which there was a small community of religious women, who, through fear of a
barbarian army—probably of the Picts, by whom the King of Northumbria had been
so recently slain in battle—had fled from the monastery which Cuthbert had a
short time before given to them as a residence. One of these virgins, who was a
kinswoman of Ethelwald, had for a whole year suffered
excruciating pains in her head and side, which no medicine could relieve.
Cuthbert, taking pity on her, anointed her with the holy oil, and immediately
she recovered, and in a few days was restored to perfect health.
Not
long after this a striking miracle was performed by the Saint in favour of an officer of the name of Hildmaer,
who had been attached to the Court of the King and was a most fervent Catholic,
and with his whole household was so earnest in the practice of all good works,
that our Saint conceived a great affection for him, and whenever his duties
took him into the neighbourhood was accustomed to
visit at his house. This officer came to Cuthbert in great haste, on horseback,
and entreated him at once to send a Priest to administer the sacrament of the
Body and Blood of our Lord to his wife, who was at the point of death. The
truth was that the poor, devout woman was permitted by God, for her greater
merit, to be possessed by an evil spirit; but the husband was ashamed to make
this known to the holy Bishop, who esteemed her so much on account of her
piety. Whilst the Saint was considering what priest he should send with the
officer, he suddenly learnt in spirit what was the real nature of his wife’s
malady, and he said to the officer : “I must send no one, but I will go myself
with you to visit her”. As they rode together the husband wept, and, seeing the
tears chasing each other down the manly cheeks of the rough soldier, Cuthbert’s
tender heart was deeply moved, and, addressing him in words of gentle
tenderness, consoling and encouraging him, he told him that such assaults of
the evil one were not always a punishment for crime, but a trial which God
permitted to fall upon the innocent. “I know,” he added, “that before our
arrival at the house the demon will be put to flight, and that your wife
herself will come out to meet us and will help me to dismount from my horse,
taking these reins into her hand.”
These
words proved to be true, for as they neared the house the wicked spirit
suddenly departed, “not daring to await the coming of the Holy Ghost, with
whom the man of God was full ”. The noble lady, freed from the chains which had
bound her, rose as from a dead sleep, and stood on the threshold to meet them,
seizing the bridle of the horse on which the Saint was seated, and testifying
to her complete recovery of both mind and body.
A
contagious disease at another time broke out in his diocese, and Cuthbert at
once hastened to the spot. After visiting and bringing the consolations of
religion to those who had been assailed by the epidemic, he asked the Priest
who accompanied him if there was still anyone sick amongst the poor afflicted
people whom he could bless before departing. “Then,” says the Priest, to whom
we are indebted for this story, “I showed him in the distance a poor woman
bathed in tears, one of whose sons was already dead, and who held another in
her arms, just about to render its last breath. The Bishop ran to her, and
taking the dying child from its mother’s arms, kissed it first and then blessed
it, and restored it to the mother, saying to her, as our Blessed Lord said to
the widow of Nain : “ Woman, weep not; have no more fear or sorrow, your son is
saved Can there be wonder that such deeds as these gave rise in the hearts of
our Anglo-Saxon ancestors to that deep affection and veneration for our
venerable Father Cuthbert beyond any other English Saint.
DEATH
OF KING EGFRID.
WE
must now return to King Egfrid and his untimely fate. Though noted for his
piety and zeal for religion, he was fond of conquest, and engaged in many wars.
In the May of 685, much against the advice of St. Cuthbert, to whom he was
greatly attached, he led an army into Scotland, and began to ravage, with great violence and
cruelty, the kingdom of the Picts.
The
Picts formed one of the two indigenous races who occupied what is now known as
Scotland. One of these races —the Cumbrians, or “Britons”—inhabited the country
south of the Firths of Forth and Clyde; the other — the Picts—originally
inhabited the whole country north of these estuaries, as well as Galloway and a
considerable part of Ireland. Both belonged to the Celtic race. From the time
when they first became known to the Romans, the Picts were divided into two
branches—the Northern and the Southern. The Southern Picts adopted Christianity
at a much earlier period than the Northern Picts,* having been converted to the
faith by the preaching of St. Ninian, the Apostle of the Kingdom of
Strathclyde.
Egfrid crossed the Firth, and penetrating beyond the Tay,
destroyed two forts. But the native forces, by feigned retreats, succeeded in
luring the invaders into a defile at Dunnichen, near
Forfar, where the King was surrounded and slain, with nearly all his army.
Cuthbert, knowing by divine inspiration that the time of Egfrid’s death was
near at hand, as he had foretold a year before to the King’s sister, the Abbess
Elfleda, set out for the sunny city of Carlisle to meet the Queen Ermenburga,
who had gone there to the monastery of her sister to await the issue of the
campaign.
The
Provost of Carlisle, named Waga, accompanied by some of the leading citizens,
came to do the honours of the ancient city, and
accompanied the Bishop round the walls, and pointed out to him the remains of
Roman antiquities, with which the place abounded. On arriving at a fountain of marvellous workmanship, of which, it is said, traces are
still discernible, the saintly Bishop suddenly became distracted in spirit,
and, leaning on his staff, bent his face to the ground. Then raising his eyes
to heaven, and sighing deeply, he whispered in a low voice, softly, “Perhaps
at this very moment the hazard of the battle is over”. A Priest who was
standing at his side, and overheard the words, asked him the meaning of this
exclamation. St. Cuthbert, wishing to conceal the vision which he had seen,
replied: “Do you not see how wonderfully changed and disturbed the air is,
and who amongst mortals is sufficient to search out the judgments of God?”.
However, he at once went to the Queen, and said to her, “See that you mount
your horse early at dawn on Monday next, and go with as much haste as possible
to the Royal City (the strongly fortified Castle of Bamborough), lest, haply,
the King should be slain. But as I am engaged to dedicate the church of a neighbouring monastery, I will follow you immediately after
the ceremony. On the next day, which was Sunday, after consecrating the new
church, he preached to the brethren of the monastery. Towards the end of his
discourse, he solemnly addressed them in these words—“I beseech you, most
beloved brethren, according to the warning of the Apostle, ‘ Watch, stand fast
in the faith, girt you like men, and be strong, lest, haply, some temptation come
and find you unprepared ’. Wherefore, be ever mindful of that precept of the
Lord, ‘Watch and pray, lest ye enter into temptation”.
His
surprised audience thought that he alluded to the return of the pestilence,
which had carried off some of their number, and which, in the years 681 and
682, had devastated the whole of England and Ireland. But on the next day a
soldier, who had escaped from the battle, arrived in Carlisle, and, by the sad
announcement which he brought, explained the hidden meaning of the man of
God’s discourse.
On
that very day, the 20th of May, and at the same hour in which it was revealed
to Cuthbert, as he was standing in ecstasy at the fountain, King Egfrid had
been slain, and his army cut to pieces by his side. Fortunately for the Anglic kingdom, “the hope and force of which,” writes Bede,
“began to retreat like an ebbing tide,” Aldfrid, who was famed for his wisdom
and valour, was summoned home and invested with the
royal dignity. His reign proved a blessing to the whole kingdom, and obtained
for him the title of Aldfrid the Wise.
The
shock of the fatal termination of Egfrid’s expedition, and the death of the
King, induced his Queen, Ermenburga, to retire into the monastery over which
her sister presided at Carlisle. St. Cuthbert once more journeyed to that city,
to give her the religious habit, and for the purpose of ordaining some Priests,
at the request of the brethren of his own monastery. During this visit, which
took place probably in the latter part of the year 686, not long before his
death, and which was the last he paid to this city, a memorable and touching
interview took place between the venerable Bishop and St. Herbert, the hermit
of Derwentwater.
ST.
CUTHBERT AND ST. HERBERT.
HERBERT,
who is known to us only through his connexion with
St. Cuthbert, led a solitary life, in a cell on an island a the north-eastern
end of the beautiful lake of Derwentwater, which carries away the palm from all
the lakes of Cumberland. There is no record come down to us of how he became
acquainted with St. Cuthbert, but it is possible he may, in earlier life, have
been under the spiritual jurisdiction of the Saint at Mailros or Lindisfarne. At all events, it was by the advice of Cuthbert that he had
chosen an eremitical life. The two Saints were united in the bonds of a most
intimate spiritual friendship, and it had been their custom to meet together at
least once a year. Hearing that Cuthbert was at Carlisle, Herbert came from his
island home to converse with him, “in the hope of being more and more inflamed
by heavenly desires by his wholesome exhortations Whilst they were mutually
inebriating each other with draughts of heavenly life, Cuthbert said to his
friend: “Bethink you, brother Herbert, of anything you may have need to ask
me, and speak to me about it, for after we shall have departed the one from the
other, we shall never more meet again in this world, nor see each other with
the eyes of the flesh. For I am assured that the time of my dissolution is not
far off, and the laying aside of this tabernacle is at hand.”
On
hearing these words Herbert fell at the feet of Cuthbert, and, shedding
abundant tears, said to him: “ I beseech you, by the Lord, do not leave me, but
bear in mind me, your friend and companion, and beg of the mercy of God that,
as we have served Him on earth, so we may pass together to behold His
brightness in heaven; for you know how I have always endeavoured to live by the command of your mouth, and that in whatsoever thing I have
offended through ignorance or frailty, that I have striven to correct, at the
good pleasure of your will.”.
The
holy Bishop bowed his head in prayer, and being taught by the Holy Spirit that
his prayer was heard, “Rise, my brother,” he said, “and weep not, but rejoice
greatly, for the divine mercy has granted what we asked Him”. They parted,
Cuthbert to return to his episcopal see, which he not long after resigned, and
Herbert to his solitary cell on Derwentwater.
The
subsequent events confirmed both the promises and the truth of the prediction.
After their parting they never saw each other with the eyes of the body, but on
the same day, and at one and the same moment (Wednesday, the 20th of March,
687), departing this life, Cuthbert on bis bleak rock in the midst of the
German Ocean, Herbert in his cell on his grassy island, reposing on the
unruffled waters of the peaceful and beautiful Cumberland lake, their souls
were united together in the beatific vision, and were translated, by the
ministry of angels, to the throne of the Eternal King.
Herbert,
however, as Bede relates, was prepared by a long illness, and perhaps by the
dispensation of our Lord’s mercy, that the refining pain of suffering might
supply whatever deficiency of merit he might have in comparison with the
blessed Cuthbert, so that, being equalled in grace to
his saintly friend and intercessor, they might, as they had at one and the same
day departed from the body, be thought worthy to be admitted together to the
one and the like seat of everlasting bliss.
And
now our Saint, knowing by divine revelation of his approaching death, resolved
in his mind to lay down the cares of his pastoral office, and to return once
more to his hermit’s life, in order, without solicitude, to prepare by prayer
and heavenly contemplation and psalmody for his departure. Before putting this
resolve into execution, he desired first to make a complete visitation, not
only of his diocese, but of all the religious houses which he had founded, to
confirm and strengthen their devout inmates by his last words of counsel and
exhortation. Whilst he was thus engaged, at her pressing invitation, he paid a
second visit to the royal virgin Elfleda at Whitby, where she governed as
Abbess the convent founded by St. Hilda.
No
English Saint had more frequent or more affectionate intercourse than Cuthbert
with the heads of the great monasteries of holy women which were then so
numerous in the north of England, and especially with those royal princesses
who ruled over the large communities, some of which were double monasteries,
at Coldingham, Whitby, Tynemouth, and Carlisle. This
fact is sufficient evidence to confute the assertions made by modern writers
that St. Cuthbert had a great antipathy to the “devout female sex”.
One
object of his visit to Whitby was to consecrate a church for the use of the community,
which had increased to a considerable number. As he was seated at the table
with the Abbess, Cuthbert became wrapt in contemplation.
His limbs were convulsed, he changed colour, his eyes
became fixed, and the knife which he held in his hand dropped upon the table. A
Priest who was assisting the Bishop leaned towards Elfleda, and whispered to
her, “Ask the Bishop what he has just now seen, for I know that he sees something
hidden, which the rest of us cannot see”. On her questioning the Saint,
Cuthbert answered, playfully: “Do you think I can eat the whole day? Surely I
ought to rest a little!” But she was not to be turned aside by this evasion of
her question, but urgently besought him to reveal the vision. “I have seen,”
he replied, “the soul of a certain holy person in this monastery borne up by
the hands of angels to heaven, and tomorrow, when I am celebrating Mass, you
yourself shall tell me his name.”
On
hearing this, the Abbess at once sent to the monastery to inquire who had
lately departed this life; but the messenger, finding all safe and well, set
out next morning to return to his mistress. On the road, he met some persons
carrying in a cart the body of one of the shepherds, who had been noted for his
saintly life, and who had met his death by falling from a tree which he had
incautiously climbed, at the moment when the Saint had seen his soul borne up
to heaven. The Abbess, on being told of this, immediately hurried to the
church, and, with womanly impetuosity, cried out to the Bishop, “I pray you,
my Lord Bishop, remember during Mass the soul of my servant Haduald,
who was killed yesterday by falling from a tree”.
Thomas
of Ely, the author of the life of St. Ethelreda, the noble Queen of Northumbria,
“regia virgo,” the royal Saint and virgin, as he
calls her, tells us that she had a great friendship for St. Cuthbert, though
this fact is not mentioned by Bede. She not only gave great gifts to the
Monastery of Lindisfarne, but embroidered for him with her own hands a stole
and maniple covered with gold and precious stones, that, wearing it at the
altar, he might always remember her at the holy sacrifice.
VISITS
THE ABBESS VERCA AT TYNEMOUTH.
HIS
last visit of all was to another Abbess of high birth: this was Verca, the Abbess of the monastery at Tynemouth.
I
have already pointed out the difficulty which exists as to the locality to
which Bede refers when he speaks of the river Tine; but however opinions may
differ as to the monastery mentioned in chap. 1, it seems probable, if not
certain, that the visit of St. Cuthbert, which took place shortly before his
death, was to the Nunnery at Tynemouth over which Verca ruled as Abbess. A chapel of wood was built here by King Edwin, in which his
daughter took the veil. This chapel was afterwards rebuilt with stone by
Oswald, in the eighth century, and dedicated to St. Mary; and having been
repeatedly plundered by the Danes, was refounded by Sostig, Earl of Northumberland. In 1074, it was annexed to
the Monastery of Jarrow, and both of these were made cells to the Abbey of Durham.
It would appear from this that the Nunnery at Tynemouth had been converted into
a monastery of men. In 1090, a priory of Black Canons was established here by
Earl Mowbray, who turned it into a fortress during his conspiracy against
William Rufus, when it was again nearly demolished, but rebuilt in mo. It was
occasionally the residence of the Queens of Edward I. and II, and was
afterwards plundered by the Scots.
St.
Cuthbert was received with great veneration by the Abbess and her sisters.
After the hour of the noonday rest, which was usually observed by all religious
communities, Cuthbert, feeling thirsty, asked them to bring him a glass of
water to drink. He made the sign of the cross over it, as was his custom, and
having drunk a small quantity, handed back the glass to the Priest who had
brought it to him.
This
was the Priest attached to the monastery, and on receiving the cup he raised
it to his lips, and, to his astonishment, the water seemed to have acquired the flavour of wine. This miracle was related to Ven.
Bede by one of the Priests of the Church, who afterwards lived and died in the
Monastery of Jarrow, of which Bede was a monk.
On
taking leave of Verca, she presented a linen winding
sheet to Cuthbert, which he ever afterwards retained, and in which his Body was
enveloped after death.
RETURNS
TO FARNE.
TWO
years, counting from the date of his election, had now been spent by him as
Bishop. Warned of his approaching end, he returned to Lindisfarne, and there
spent the festival of Christmas in the midst of his brethren. Immediately
afterwards he withdrew to his hermitage in the Island of Farne, exulting in the
repose he had gained, and bent upon preparing for his last passage. His
faithful monks gathered round him as he was about to embark, and one of their number,
who, on account of his venerable age and long-tried virtue, was privileged to
speak, asked him to tell them when they might hope for his return. He replied,
“ When you shall bring my body hither”. The sorrowing community then
accompanied him in tears to the seashore.
It must have been a touching scene, this last parting between the saintly Bishop and his spiritual children. Archbishop Eyre likens it to the last interview between the patriarch Jacob and his sons, but does it not recall to our minds with greater force, another parting—more affecting still, that last farewell between the Apostle of the Gentiles and the clergy of Ephesus, on the shores of the Aegean, every detail of which was re-enacted? “ Kneeling down, he prayed with them all, and there was much weeping among them all; and falling on the neck of Paul, they kissed him. Being grieved most of all for the word which he had said, that they should see his face no more. And they brought him on his way to the ships.” During
the two months Cuthbert survived, he relaxed somewhat the strictness of his
solitude, and was accustomed to leave his cell and converse more frequently
with the monks who came to visit him. These visits were very grateful to him,
and he poured out upon his brethren all the tenderness of his paternal heart.
Not only did he, “like the patriarch of the desert,” exhort them in moving
words to fidelity and perseverance in their holy state, and instruct them in
the intricate ways of Christian perfection, but with thoughtful kindness
provided for their corporal necessities.
One
day several monks having come to see him, Cuthbert went out to them, and having
“refreshed them with spiritual refection,” he concluded by telling them before
setting out on their homeward voyage, to cook and eat a goose which he had
provided for their refreshment. Then giving them his blessing, he retired into
his cell. The monks, among whom was a venerable Priest, named Cynemund, noted for his saintly life, and who was Bede’s
informant, having brought a supply of food with them,
Two
months were thus passed in the quiet enjoyment of his-well earned repose,
during which he redoubled his prayers and austerities, looking for the end.
Towards
the end of February, he was seized with a sudden illness, and this was the
immediate forerunner of his death. Worn out with unceasing labour during the toilsome years of his missionary life, as Prior and Bishop,
enfeebled by vigil and fast, and exposure to the wild storms which swept over
his ocean home, his constitution still suffering from the effects of the severe
attack of the great sickness which prostrated him at Mailros in the early years of his religious profession, the Christian warrior sank to
rest upon the battlefield, where he had fought and conquered the enemy of
souls. During three weeks of continual suffering, the last remains of strength
were completely exhausted. Fortunately we have a minute account of his last
illness, related to Ven. Bede by an eye-witness—the Priest Herefrid,
who then presided over the Monastery of Lindisfarne as Abbot.
LAST
ILLNESS AND DEATH.
So, gentle one,
Heaven
set thee free ; for ere thy years were full
Thy
work was done.
—Cardinal Newman,
LAST
ILLNESS AND DEATH, AS RELATED BY THE PRIOR HEREFRID.
I
CANNOT omit one word of this most interesting narrative, for these descriptions
of the deathbeds of the Saints of old, told in the artless words of some
venerable monk, are, to my mind, amongst the most touching records of the past.
The simplicity and pathos of the language, the minuteness of detail, the
reverence and undoubting faith, and deeply religious tone, which breathe
through every line, transport us at once out of this everyday life into the
midst of the unseen world and to the very threshold of the house of God.
“After three weeks’ continued wasting and infirmity, Cuthbert came to his end
thus: He began to be taken ill on the
fourth day of the week (Wednesday, the 27th of February, 687), and in like
manner on the fourth day of the week, his sickness having been accomplished, he
departed to the Lord.
“And
when I came on the first morning after he was taken ill (for I had gone to the
island with the brethren three days before), through a desire to receive from
him the comfort of his wonted benediction and exhortation, and having
intimated by the usual signal that I had arrived, he came to the window, and
only returned a sigh in answer to my greeting, whereupon I said, ‘What is the
matter, my Lord Bishop? Have you been seized with illness during the night?’
And he said, ‘Yes, sickness has stricken me this night’. Now I was thinking of
his old infirmity, namely, an almost daily trouble, wherewith he was wasted,
and I did not suppose that he spoke of a new and unusual attack, and without
asking any more questions— ‘ Give us,’ I said, ‘ your blessing, for it is time
for us to go on board, and to return home ’.
“
‘Do as you say,’ he said; ‘go on board and return home safe, and when God
shall have taken my soul, bury me in this cell, on the east side of my oratory,
opposite the Holy Cross which I have erected there. There is at the north of
the same oratory a (stone) coffin, hidden by sods, which formerly the venerable
Abbot Cudda presented to me. Place my body in that,
and wrap it in the fine linen which you will find there. I would not indeed be
clothed in it while living, but for the love of the Godbeloved woman who sent it to me, the Abbess Verca, I have
taken care to preserve it to wrap my body.’ Hearing this, ‘ I beseech you,
Father,’ I said, ‘since you are sick and about to die, permit some of the
brethren to remain and minister to you’. But he said, ‘Go now, and return at a
suitable time And though I pressed him more earnestly to accept our service, I
was unable to obtain my request. At last I asked when we might return, and he
said: ‘When God shall please, and He shall show’ you’. We accordingly departed
as he had commanded, and having called together all the monks in the Church, I
ordered prayers to be made without intermission for him, saying that it seemed
to me, from his words, that the day was drawing near on which he was to depart
to God.
“Now, on account of his illness, I was very anxious to go back to him, but for
five days a tempest opposed my wishes, so that we could not return ; and the
issue of the event showed that what happened was done by God.
“For as Almighty God would chastise His servant, in order thoroughly to cleanse
him from all stain of worldly frailty, and to show his adversaries that nothing
could prevail against the fortitude of his faith, He was pleased to separate
him for so long a time from man; and to prove and refine him by the pain of the
flesh, and a sharper struggle with the old enemy
“But
when the calmer weather had returned, we went back to the island, when we found
that he had gone out of his monastery (cell), and that he was sitting in the
house in which we were accustomed to reside. And as a certain urgent matter
constrained the other monks who accompanied me to sail back to the opposite
shore, I myself resolved to remain on the island, and to minister to our
Father’s immediate wants. Wherefore, warming some water, I washed his foot,
which, on account of a long-continued swelling, had an ulcer, from which matter
issued, and consequently required attention; and also warming some wine, I
brought it, and asked him to taste it, for I saw by his countenance that he was
entirely worn out with want and sickness.
“When I had finished tending him, he laid himself quietly on his bed, and I sat
down beside him. As he was silent, I said: ‘I see, my Lord Bishop, that you
have been troubled with much infirmity since we left you, and we think it
strange that you would not, when we departed, suffer us to leave some one to
wait upon you’. He answered: ‘This happened by the providence and will of God,
so that, destitute of all presence and help of men, I should suffer some
adversity; for, after you were gone away from me, immediately my disease began
to press heavily upon me; therefore, going out from my cell, I came here, that
whosoever of you should come to minister to me should find me here, and have no
need to enter my cell. Now, from the time I came in here, I have never moved
hence, nor changed the position of my limbs, but have remained quietly where I
am for these five days and nights.’ Whereupon I said: ‘ And how, my Lord
Bishop, could you live thus? Have you remained here without taking food for so
long a time?’ Whereupon, lifting up the covering of his bed, on which he was
sitting, he showed me five onions concealed therein, and said: ‘This has been
my food during these days; for whensoever my mouth burned with intolerable
dryness or thirst, by tasting these I refreshed and recruited myself’. (One of
these onions appeared to have been a little eaten; less, however, than one-half
of it.) ‘ And, over and above,’ he continued, ‘never have my enemies, during
all the time I have abode in this island,, assailed me with so many
persecutions as during these five days.’
“I did not have to ask what these temptations were of which he spoke: I only
asked him to allow some of us to wait upon him. To this he assented, and
retained several of our monks, among whom there was the elder Baeda, the
Priest, who had always been accustomed to render him the most familiar
services. And also, he specially named another person from among the brethren,
whom he wished to remain with the others in attendance upon himself: one, to
wit, who was grievously afflicted by a long continued diarrhoea,
which had baffled the skill of the physicians.
“He was a man noted for religious prudence and gravity, and well deserving to be
a witness of the last words which the man of God uttered, and in what manner
he departed to the Lord.
“Meanwhile returning home, I told the brethren that our venerable Father had
given orders that he should be buried in his own cell. ‘ But it seems to me,’ I
said, ‘ that it would be more just and meet for us to ask him to permit his
body to be translated hither, and be deposited in the church with suitable honour.’ What I said was approved by all, and, coming to
the Bishop, we aske him, saying, ‘We dare not, Lord Bishop, despise your
command, wherein you have given orders to be buried here; nevertheless, it
seems good to us to ask permission to transfer your body, so that we maybe
allowed to have you to remain among us But he said—‘It was my wish to rest in
the body here, where I have fought my little wrestling (such as it was) for the
Lord, and where I desire to finish my course, and whence I hope to be raised up
by the merciful Judge to a crown of glory. I think it would be more advantageous
to you that I should rest here, on account of the trouble you shall have from
fugitives and evil-doers, who will probably fly for refuge to my tomb; for
whatsoever I am myself, I know that the report shall go abroad of me that I am
a servant of Christ, and you will necessarily have very often to intercede for
such persons with the powerful of the world, and so to undergo much labour and trouble for the possession of my body.’ But on
our beseeching him much and long, and assuring him that labour of this kind would be both light and agreeable, after taking counsel with
himself, the man of the Lord replied—‘If you would really overcome what I had
disposed, and should bear my body from this place, it seems to me that it would
be better, in this case, to bury me inside your church so that you may visit my
tomb whenever you please, and have it in your power to admit, or not admit,
those that come hither’. We thanked him for his permission and counsel; we knelt’ down for his blessing, and returning home, from that forth we did not cease
to visit him frequently.
“And
when his sickness continuing, he saw that his dissolution was at hand, he commanded
that he should be carried back to his little cell and oratory. Now it was the
third hour of the day... There we accordingly carried him; for through his excessive
weakness he was unable to walk. But when we came to the door, we begged him to
allow someone of us to enter along with him and minister to him, for no one but
himself for many years had ever entered therein. And looking round he perceived
the brother, who, as I mentioned before, was ill of a flux, and he said let Unalsted (Walsted) enter along
with me—for that was the brother’s name. Unalsted accordingly remained with him within until the ninth hour; and going out, he
called me, saying, ‘The Bishop commands you to come with him. Moreover, I can
tell you a new and very marvellous circumstance that
has happened to me, for from the time that I went in thither, and touched the
Bishop to lead him to the oratory, I forthwith felt that I was freed from all
trouble of my long infirmity.’
“Now
I went to him about the ninth hour of the day (that is, three o’clock), and I
found him reclining in a corner of his oratory opposite the altar; and I
myself began to sit down, but he did not speak much, for the burthen of his
infirmity prevented him from speaking with ease. But on my pressingly asking
him to leave some words which might be considered as a bequest and as a last farewell
to the brethren, he began to speak a few words, but they were powerful,
concerning peace and humility, and cautioning us against those persons that
choose rather to wrestle against such things than to take delight therein.
‘Keep peace,’ he said, ‘one with another, and heavenly charity; and when
necessity demands you to hold counsel as to your state, take great care that
you be of one mind in your conclusions; and, moreover, maintain mutual concord
with other servants of Christ, and despise not the household of the faith, who
come to you seeking hospitality, but be careful to receive them, to entertain
them, and to send them away with friendly kindness; and do not think that you
are better than other followers of the same faith and conversation. But with
those that err from the unity of Catholic peace, either by not celebrating
Easter at the proper time, or by living perversely, have no communion. And know
and hold in memory, that if necessity should compel you to choose one of two
evils, I would much rather that you should dig up my bones from the tomb, and,
carrying them away with you, desert these parts, and dwell wheresoever God may
provide—much rather, I say, than, by giving any consent to the iniquities of
schismatics, you should submit your neck to their yoke. Strive then most
diligently to learn and to observe the Catholic Statutes of the Fathers; practise also with great solicitude those rules of regular
life, which, by my ministry, the divine mercy hath vouchsafed to give you. For
I know that although I have lived contemptible to some, nevertheless, after my
departure, you shall see more openly what I have been, and how that the
doctrine which I have taught is not to be despised.’ These and the like words
the man of God spoke at intervals; for, as we have said, the greatness of his
infirmity deprived him of the power of much speaking.
“Thus he spent a quiet day till evening, in the expectation of future
blessedness; yea, and tranquilly continued the wakeful night also in prayer.
Now when the wonted time of nocturn prayers, that is, of matins, was come,
after receiving the salutary sacraments (of penance and extreme unction) at my
hands, he fortified his departure, which he knew had now come, by the communion
of the Body and Blood of our Lord; * and having lifted up his eyes to heaven
and extended his hands on high, his soul, intent on heavenly praises, departed
to the joys of the kingdom of heaven.”
O
blessed Saint, intercede for us at the hour of our death, that we, too, poor
miserable sinners, thy children, may have the grace to be united to thee for
ever before the great white throne of God!
His
departure took place early on the morning of Wednesday, the 20th of March, a.d. 687. Herefrith at once announced the sad tidings to the
brethren, who accompanied him, and who had spent the whole night in prayer, and
who were at that moment chanting at matins, the fifty-ninth psalm, then as
now, part of the ferial office for the fourth day of the week, beginning with
the words, “Deus repulisii nos”
“O God Thou hast cast us off, and hast destroyed us : Thou hast been angry, and
hast had mercy upon us’’. One of the monks ran and lighted two torches, and
holding them in each hand went up to an elevated spot and made the signal
before agreed upon, to one of the brothers, who had been appointed to watch
upon the watch-tower on the heugh, which probably stood on the spot from which
the coastguard-men still look out upon the ocean.
Seeing
the lights, he at once ran down to the Church, where the whole community were
assembled for matins, and announced to them that the sainted Bishop and Father
was no more. By a singular coincidence, the monks were at that moment engaged
in chanting the same psalm which their brethren had been singing at Fame. This
fact was remembered afterwards and was considered to be prophetic of some
grievous calamity or temptation, we know not what, which fell upon the
monastery shortly after the death of the holy Bishop, and was put to flight and
healed by the prudence and piety of Bishop Eadbert, the successor of St.
Wilfred, who for a brief period succeeded St. Cuthbert.
HIS
BODY IS TAKEN TO LINDISFARNE.
THE
body of the venerable Father, swathed in the linen sheet given to him by Verca the Abbess, and lying in Cudda’s coffin, was carried down to the shore and placed in a boat, and so conveyed to
Lindisfarne. On its arrival, it was received by a great multitude of people,
together with the whole body of monks, “and with choirs of choristers,” and in
slow and solemn procession and the chanting of the sublime psalms of
penitence, borne into the monastic church.
It
has been a pleasing occupation to me to try and trace the path by which the
sacred Body of the Saint was carried. Probably the boat from Fame would land in
the bay which stretches from the point of the rock at the east termination of
the heugh, to the castle. The bearers of the sacred relics would then climb the
slight declivity called the Palace Hill, and passing through St. Cuthbert’s
Square, and along Fenkle Street, into the
market-place in which the cross now stands, would from thence proceed through
the churchyard to the west door of the Cathedral. On arriving at the church,
the venerable Body was clothed in all the episcopal vestments, and then
deposited in its stone coffin on the right side of the altar. There it remained
undisturbed for eleven years.
HIS
GRAVE IS OPENED, AND THE BODY OF THE SAINT FOUND ENTIRE AND INCORRUPT.
IN
the year 698 and during the episcopate of Eadbert, the seventh Bishop of Lindisfarne,
the monks, wishing to place the relics of the Saint in a shrine raised above
the floor of the church, with the permission of the Bishop, on the 20th of March,
the anniversary of St. Cuthbert’s death, opened his tomb, expecting that by
this time the Body would have been consumed and nothing left but the skeleton.
To their amazement and joy, they found the whole Body as entire as when he was
living, and more like one in a sound sleep than one who was dead. All the
vestments, moreover, with which he had been clothed were not only unsoiled, but
even appeared in all their freshness, and were of marvellous brightness. Trembling with fear at the sight, the monks hastened to inform the
Bishop, who was spending the Lent on the little island where St. Cuthbert had
lived for a time before migrating to Fame. They took with them the chasuble in
which the Saint had been vested as a proof of the truth of their story. The
holy Bishop kissed the sacred relic, ordered the monks to swathe the body in
new garments, and to place it in the coffin, or chest which had been prepared.
Not long after, on the 6th of May, the Bishop himself died and was buried in
the grave in which the relics of St. Cuthbert had reposed. The monks did as
they were directed by the Bishop, and wrapping the sacred remains in new
raiment, they laid it in a light chest upon the pavement of the sanctuary on
the right side of the high altar in the Cathedral Church of St. Peter.
The
incorrupt Body of the Saint reposed in peace in this shrine for nearly one
hundred years, and was visited by innumerable pilgrims, in whose behalf many
miracles were wrought, as is duly recorded in the pages of Simeon and Reginald.
During
this period the See of Lindisfarne was successively occupied by Eadfrid, Ethelwold
— during whose episcopate Ceolwulf, King of Northumberland, resigned his crown
and became a monk at Lindisfarne—Cynewulf, and Higbald.
THE
DANES LAND ON THE NORTH COAST. THEY PLUNDER THE MONASTERY OF LINDISFARNE.
IN the tenth year of the reign of Higbald, who succeeded to
the episcopate in 780, and was eleventh Bishop in succession to St. Aidan, the
Danes landed upon the coast of Northumberland. Owing to the disorder which
prevailed in the state of the kingdom, no opposition was made to the landing of
these barbarians. They marched without impediment through the bowels of the
land, ravaging and destroying everything in their course. Neither age nor sex
were respected, and nothing, however sacred, escaped their fury.
Churches
and monasteries, rich with the offerings of the faithful, were the special
objects of their attack. Altars and shrines were plundered, priests and monks
were massacred, and every step of their progress was marked with blood and
rapine.
On
the 7th of June, they came to the Church of Lindisfarne, which fell into their
hands an easy prey. Not content with despoiling the altars and carrying off
the gold and silver ornaments which enriched the church, they exercised every
possible cruelty upon the monks, who had endeavoured to conceal themselves. The greater number were discovered, and some were at
once slaughtered on the island, others were stripped naked and compelled to
undergo every indignity, and others were drowned in the sea.
The
news of this calamity filled all the nation of the Saxons with shame and
sorrow. Lindisfarne had long been to them an object of peculiar reverence.
The
learned Alcuin received the account at the Court of Charlemagne, and evinced by
his tears the intensity of his grief. “See,” he writes to Ethelred, King of
Northumberland, “the Church of St. Cuthbert is sprinkled with the blood of its
Priests, and robbed of all its ornaments ; that place, the most venerable of
all places in Britain, has been given a prey to the Gentiles.’’
The
Danish invaders were so far from being satiated with slaughter and plunder,
that the next year brought with it a second descent, and a repetition of their
sacrilegious outrages. But the kingdom of Northumbria for awhile laid aside its
internal strife, and, aided by the Mercians, surprised and cut off the invading
hosts as they were plundering Jarrow-on-the-Tyne. Bishop Higbald and the monks
who had escaped the fury of the Danes hastened to return to their church and
were filled with joy to find that though stripped of all its other riches, it
still retained the treasure they valued most, the incorrupt Body of the Saint,
which had in a wonderful way been left undisturbed in its shrine.
We
must now pass over an interval of eighty-two years more, which brings us to the
episcopate of Eardulph, the sixteenth and last Bishop
of Lindisfarne, a.d. 875. In this year the Danes, those implacable foes of the Saxons, once more
landed on the northern shores. They first attacked the city of York. Thence
they marched northwards as far as the Tyne; but here their progress was partly
checked by the armies of Osbert and Ella, the rival kings of Northumbria, who
for a time laid aside their animosities, and made common cause against the
common foe. But the Danes in the end were victorious, and then began their wild
course of bloodshed and destruction. The Monastery of St. Oswin, at the mouth
of the Tyne, was plundered and set on fire; and, with their terrible chief Halfdene at their head, they, for the second time, directed
their steps towards Lindisfarne.
At
the tidings of their approach, consternation and dismay fell upon the Bishop Eardulph and the monks. The Bishop hastily assembled the
brethren to deliberate upon the course to be adopted. Their only safety lay in
instant flight; but remembering the dying injunctions of their saintly patron,
they decided to carry his Body with them.
The
shrine was instantly removed from the choir, and in the wooden coffin in which
the remains of Cuthbert reposed were placed the following relics : the head of
St. Oswald, a few bones of St. Aidan, the bones of the Bishops Eata, Eadfrid,
and Ethelwold. A number of clerks were then selected from the attendants on the
Bishop to bear the coffin to a place of safety. When all these preparations
had been completed, with tears and lamentations, the monks bade farewell to
their beloved monastery, deserting, as Symeon has said, their noble church, the motherchurch of the nation of the Bernicians, and the residence of so many saints. This
occurred in the year of our Lord 875, two hundred and forty years after the
foundation of the see by St. Oswald and St. Aidan, and one hundred and eighty
from the death of St. Cuthbert. On the arrival of the Danes, the monastery was
pillaged and given to the flames.
The
Bishop and monks, with their precious treasure, took refuge in the Northumbrian
hills, where they were joined by a large number of people from the island and
mainland, flying from the fury of the infidels to place themselves under the
protection of their glorious patron and father. For seven long years, and more,
the army of the Danes held possession of the whole country, spreading ruin and
desolation on every side.
“Everywhere,”
says Symeon, “the monasteries and churches were burnt, the servants and
hand-maidens of Christ subjected to every indignity and insult,” and, in a
word, fire and sword were carried from the eastern sea to the western. It thus
happened that the Bishop, and they who accompanied the holy Body, nowhere found
any place of repose; but, going forwards and backwards, hither and thither,
they fled before the face of the cruel and relentless barbarians.
It
is not my intention to enter into a detailed account of these wanderings. Those
who wish to possess themselves of all the particulars of these journeyings may
consult the pages of Archbishop Eyre’s fascinating volume.
It
is indeed a story of passing and marvellous interest.
I know nothing to surpass it in sacred or profane history. That a numerous
company of men, with their wives and children, should forsake their homes, and
expose themselves to all the hardships of such a life, without shelter, without
a place to rest, often without food, in order to protect the Body of their
patron Saint, and to save it from profanation and sacrilege—that they should
wander to and fro, like the Israelites of old in the
desert, through the almost inaccessible depths of the thickly-wooded
mountains, and through trackless marsh and morass, never murmuring or repining,
are facts which must fill us with admiration and wonder. There is hardly a spot
in the north of England and south of Scotland which they did not visit, and in
every place where they halted, even for a night, offerings of every kind were
made to the Saint. “Some, on bended knees, offered him money, others brought
precious garments and silks, others gave linen and flax, woollen cloths and fleeces of wool; and those who could contribute no more gave bread
and cheese.” At first seven
A
list of the places they visited in their wanderings was compiled by Prior
Wessington in 1416, and placed over the choir door in the Cathedral of Durham;
and upon each spot where they halted a church was raised, dedicated to St.
Cuthbert. These churches and chapels are scattered profusely all over the
ancient kingdom of Northumbria, and serve as landmarks, by which we may trace
the course of the wanderings of the Saint’s Body. Towards the end of the sixth
year, the Bishop and his companions began to despair of finding a peaceful and
permanent abode in England; and a terrible famine having broken out, occasioned
by the impossibility of cultivating the land during the years that the Danes
were ravaging the country, they came to the determination of abandoning
Northumberland, and seeking refuge in Ireland.
ATTEMPTED
FLIGHT TO IRELAND.
IN
consequence of this resolution, the Bishop Eardulph,
and Eldred the Abbot, secretly assembled the oldest and most experienced of
their followers, and in confidence communicated their design to them. After
carefully weighing the reasons, they unanimously concurred to undertake the
voyage. A ship was engaged to meet the little band at the mouth of the Derwent,
at Workington, in Cumberland.
The
Body of St. Cuthbert was put on board, and those in the secret embarked, and
the rest of the younger monks, and the laymen who had followed the Body from
Lindisfarne, were left behind in ignorance of the step which had been decided
upon. The ship set sail, but the scheme was frustrated by a violent tempest
which arose almost as soon as they had quitted the port. The vessel refused to
obey its rudder, and became perfectly unmanageable, and was so violently tossed
upon the waves, that it narrowly escaped total shipwreck. Whilst rolling on its
side from the fury of the storm, a copy of the Gospels, adorned with gold and
jewels, fell overboard into the sea.
As
soon as the Bishop and the few who had been anxious to leave England landed
safely on the shore, they fell upon their knees, shedding tears, through shame
and sorrow, and earnestly prayed for forgiveness; whilst those who had been
left behind, and who had before “wept for grief, now shed tears of joy”.
The
first care of the Bishop was to search for the book they had lost, and, to his
inexpressible delight, it was found at Whitehorn, upon the opposite coast of
the Solway, having been washed upon the sands by the tide. After this
adventure, which diminished their confidence and damped their ardour, and in consequence of the famine which devastated
the country, we cannot be surprised that the greater part of the band of
followers, wearied with the labour of several years
of toilsome travel, and worn with hunger and the want of every comfort,
withdrew from the company. The only ones that remained were the Bishop, the
Abbot, and the seven faithful guardians, who had never deserted their post as
protectors of the Body of the Saint. It was then that it became necessary,
owing to the diminished number of their followers, to provide a horse to draw
the car upon which the Body was laid.
THE
WANDERERS FIND SHELTER AT CRAIKE —GUTHLAKE PROCLAIMED KING.
ANOTHER
year was spent in their desolate wanderings, and after suffering great
hardships from the famine, especially in the wild and extensive land of the
Picts, who then occupied the whole of the country north of the estuaries of the
Forth and the Clyde, the faithful monks arrived with their treasure at Craike, in the neighbourhood of
York, in the autumn of the year 882.
Craike was one of the gifts of King
Egfrid to our Saint on the day of his consecration, and St. Cuthbert had
afterwards founded a monastery there, which at that time was occupied by a body
of monks, who had returned to it after the visit of the Danes. The Abbot
received the wanderers with open arms and gave them shelter, and there they
remained for four months.
The
Danes had by this time in a great measure established themselves in Northumbria;
but Halfdene, their King, had been compelled by the
hatred of his subjects to quit the kingdom, and the invaders were left without
a leader. At this juncture St. Cuthbert appeared in a dream to Eadred, the
Abbot, and commanded him to single out as their future King Guthlake,
the son of Hardicanute, one of the Danish chieftains, who had been sold as a
slave, and was living in servitude at Whittingham, in Northumberland. The
Abbot having discovered the residence of this prince, paid the price of his
ransom, and according to the command of St. Cuthbert, proclaimed him King on
St. Oswin’s Hill at Tynemouth, by placing upon his right arm a bracelet, the
emblem of royalty. “By appointing,” says the historian of the Church of
Durham, “the son of a Danish general of fame, and of revered memory amongst his
countrymen, the minds of the people were conciliated, and under the influence
of the Patron Saint the old Northumbrians were reconciled to his government.” Guthlake showed his gratitude to St. Cuthbert, and under
his protection the Bishop and monks settled at Cuncacestre (now Chester-le-Street) in the beginning of the year
883, and there built a cathedral of wood, which was profusely endowed by the
King. Soon afterwards the Danish King gave in perpetual succession to St.
Cuthbert the whole of the land between the Wear and the Tees, and made his
church a place to which fugitives could fly in case of need, and where they
enjoyed inviolable sanctuary for the space of thirty-seven days. King Alfred,
to whom Guthred was gradually becoming a dependant prince, confirmed the gift, and together they
bestowed upon the Saint other privileges and immunities, thus preparing the way
for the temporal princedom of the Bishops of Durham, and the magnificent prerogatives
of the patrimony of St. Cuthbert.
CHESTER-LE-STREET
EPISCOPAL
SEE FOUNDED AT CHESTER-LE- STREET.
ABOUT
half-way between Newcastle and Durham, shut in from the north-east by ranges of
hill and rising grounds, but open on the south and west to the full radiancy
of the morning and noonday sun, lies the ancient and historical Roman station
of Chester-le-Street. “Its position,” says a modern
writer, “on the great road midway between the two towns, its size, its luxuries
and arts, as instanced in its relics of altars, bronzes, and pottery, and,
finally, its having been selected as the site of a church and establishment
from the earliest times, with the Roman features in both Saxon and modern
names, would lead us to conclude that a thriving military town was established
here from an early period of imperial rule, and, as we see by its coins, it was
one of the last to be deserted in the empire’s fall.” In this pleasant city the
Body of St. Cuthbert rested, and his successors, as bishops ot Chester-le-Street, carried on the line of the
Northumbrian episcopate for one hundred and thirteen years. The present church,
doubtless resting on the site of the original cathedral of wood, and of its
Norman successor, built in 1045 by Bishop Egelric,
was raised by Bee, the powerful and magnificent Prince-Bishop of Durham, who
made it a collegiate church, with a dean and five canons. It was dedicated to
St. Mary and St. Cuthbert.
Every traveller by the Team Valley line will have admired
its graceful spire, rising to the height of one hundred and fifty-six feet, and
resting upon an octagonal tower, a structure as beautiful as it is unique.
The
interior of this handsome church has, alas! fallen into the hands of the restorer,
and but few of its original features are left.
In
the nineteenth year after the Body of St. Cuthbert had found a home at
Chester-le-Street, died the venerable Bishop Eardulph,
the last Bishop of Lindisfarne and the first of Chester-le-Street,
who for forty-six years had ruled over the See of St. Aidan, and who had, in
spite of his age, borne all the toils and trials of the seven years’
wandering. To this stout-hearted prelate succeeded eight other bishops of Chester-le-Street, and during their episcopacy the church
of St. Cuthbert was enriched with many valuable gifts in money and in land.
Kings and bishops made pilgrimages to the shrine of the Saint, and presented
costly offerings in gold and silver and precious stuffs, banners and vestments.
King
Alfred on his death-bed enjoined his son and successor, Edward, always to hold
St. Cuthbert and his church in the highest reverence and affection. Edward laid
the same injunctions on his son, Athelstan, and this latter prince, on his
march to Scotland at the head of his army, visited the shrine, and made many
truly royal gifts to the church. After his death, his brother, King Edmund, who
succeeded him, also made a pilgrimage to the relics of St. Cuthbert, and
presented to the church, with princely munificence, offerings of gold and
precious vestments, and confirmed and augmented all the privileges granted by
his predecessors.
We
have now come to the year 895, when Aldune, the ninth
Bishop, occupied the episcopal throne. In this year occurred an event which
had the most momentous bearing on the fortunes of the church, and led to the
final transfer of the Body of St. Cuthbert, and of the episcopal see, with all
its honours and immunities, to the lordly Cathedral
of Durham.
SECOND
FLIGHT. THE BODY OF THE SAINT TAKEN TO RIPON.
THE
Danes once more made an irruption into Northumberland, and, admonished by a
revelation from heaven, the Bishop and “all the people, who were styled the
people of St. Cuthbert,” fled with the Body of the Saint to Ripon, which, from
its inland situation, afforded a trustworthy security against the inroads of
the barbarians.
The
paternal care of their Heavenly Father followed them in their flight, for not
one of the many persons who accompanied the Bishop, from the least to the
greatest, was afflicted with any infirmity, nor did they suffer inconvenience
or fatigue from the long and wearisome journey. They remained at Ripon about
four months, and when peace was restored, set out on their return to Chester-le-street.
This
sojourn at Ripon of the Body of St. Cuthbert forms a link between the great
Saint of Durham and the noble-hearted Wilfrid— who, when Cuthbert lived in
solitude upon the tempest-tossed Fame, almost singlehanded, fought the battle
of the rights of the Church and the episcopate and the sovereignty of Rome.
There
cannot be a greater contrast than that afforded by the lives of these two
Saints. Wilfrid, the great bishop, offspring of a noble race, was a man of war,
and his position and influence involved him in perpetual conflict with the
rough Saxon kings. Cuthbert’s life was mainly spent in ascetic retirement, far
removed from the excitement and toils of the struggle. Yet how many points of
resemblance united them together. Cuthbert had the indomitable courage and
pluck of the great Anglo-Saxon bishop, and the high-souled Wilfrid possessed
all the tenderness of heart of the gentle disciple of the Celtic Aidan.
DURHAM
Fortress
of God ! colossal abbey! thou,
In the stern grandeur, shalt outlive the
forms
That
thus unqueen thee, and above the storms
Of
coming change shalt lift thy reverend brow.
Once
more shall host and sacrifice be thine,
When
Cuthbert’s bones, concealed from curious scorn,
Down
the grand aisles in triumph shall be borne
With
jubilant psalms, by some new Palatine.
—Faber.
THE
BISHOP AND MONKS LEAVE RIPON AND SETTLE AT DURHAM.
WHEN
the travellers had advanced to a spot called by
Symeon Wardelaw, it was revealed to them that Dunholm or Durham was to be their resting-place and future
home. There has been much discussion as to the exact locality of Wardelaw, but there seems to be but little doubt that the
place indicated is that wooded hill to the south-east of the city, which
commands a view of the site of the present Cathedral and Castle. Overjoyed at
this manifestation of the will of their great patron, the Bishop and clergy
bore the Body of the Saint to the summit of that splendid plateau, which the
Wear encircles, and there deposited it in a little church constructed of the
boughs of trees. A well-founded tradition has been handed down to us that the
spot selected for this temporary chapel was the one upon which St. Mary-le-Bow
in the Bailey now stands.
‘‘When
the whole assembly” (I am quoting the words of Symeon) “accompanied the holy
Body of Father Cuthbert into Durham, it was discovered that the place,
although naturally strong, was not easily habitable, for the whole space, with
the exception of a moderate sized plain in the midst was covered with a very
dense wood. Bishop Aldune, assisted by all the
populace, and by Uhtred, Earl of the Northumbrians, cut down the whole of the
timber in a brief space of time, and made the place habitable.” The entire
population of the district, which extends from the river Coquet to the Tees,
readily and willingly rendered assistance, first to the necessary work of
clearing the ground, and at a later period to the erection of the church. When
the wood had been uprooted, and a residence assigned by lot to each person, the
Bishop, “in the warmth of his love for Christ and St. Cuthbert,” commenced to
build a suitable cathedral in stone, on a large scale, and devoted all his
energies to its completion. In the meantime the sacred remains had been
translated from their temporary resting place in the little church formed of
boughs, which we have already mentioned, and removed into another called the
White Church, and which appears to have been a portion of the great church
which was being raised by the Bishop, but not yet finished, and there it
remained during the time in which the larger fabric was being completed.
The
great stone church of Aldune, so ardent was the zeal
displayed by the people, took only three years in building, and on the 4th of
September in the year 999, “to the great joy of all and the honour of God, the incorruptible Body of the most holy Father Cuthbert” was solemnly
translated, and with becoming reverence and honour deposited in the place prepared for its reception. This translation is the one
commemorated by the annual festival still kept in this diocese. Three hundred
and sixty-one years had now elapsed from the foundation of the Northumbrian
see, and three hundred and nine from the death of St. Cuthbert. From this epoch
dates the transfer of the episcopal see from Chester-le- Street to Durham, and
the succession of the thirty-six Bishops from Aldune to Cuthbert Tunstall, the last Catholic Bishop. I pass over a period of
well-nigh fifty years. During this time devotion to the great Saint increased
in intensity, and the church of Durham grew in wealth and importance and power.
Villas and lands in the counties of Northumberland. Durham, and York were
lavishly bestowed upon the Saint and the “company of St. Cuthbert
Great
events had in the meantime occurred to change the destiny of England. Harold,
the last Saxon king, had been defeated and slain at Hastings in the year 1066,
and William the Conqueror had been crowned King of England on Christmas Day in
the Abbey Church at Westminster. Though the rest of the country at once
submitted to the arms of William, the men of Northumberland, of which the
patrimony of St. Cuthbert still formed a part, for the first three years of his
reign set the Conqueror at defiance. To suppress this resistance William sent
Robert Cumin and his earls into the North, with full powers to reduce it to obedience.
Cumin reached Durham, but on the very night of his arrival, the people rose
against their invaders, and set fire to the house in which Cumin lodged, and
the general and many of his followers were burnt alive. Another commander was despatched by the King, but was, as the people firmly
believed, providentially prevented from reaching the Bishopric.
At
length William himself undertook the expedition, and arrived at York,
threatening to lay waste the land with fire and sword. When the news of his
approach was known in Durham, the Bishop Egelwin, the
fourth in succession from Aldune, at once called
together his clergy, and it was resolved to remove the Body of St. Cuthbert to
Lindisfarne.
FLIGHT
TO LINDISFARNE.
THEIR
flight was impeded by the severity of the December frosts, and on the first day
they did not proceed beyond Jarrow. On the following night they halted at
Bedlington, and another day’s journey brought them to Tuggall, in the parish of
Bamborough. A chapel dedicated to St. Cuthbert was afterwards built at
Tuggall, the ruins of which were standing a few years ago, but have now been,
unfortunately, razed to the ground. It was not until the evening of the fourth
day after leaving Durham that the fugitives arrived at the strand opposite the
island. The night was dark and stormy, and to their dismay the tide was at its
full. The protection of the Saint did not fail them in their need. To their
relief and joy the waters of the sea retired and left them a dry passage across
the beaten track. It seems probable from this narrative that some kind of
partial restoration of the Monastery at Lindisfarne had taken place, and that
the clergy, with their precious burthen, found shelter as well as safety in
their former abode. They sojourned there about three months, and in the
beginning of the following Lent (1070), returned once more to Durham.
BENEDICTINE
MONKS INTRODUCED INTO DURHAM.
IN
the eighteenth year of the reign of the Conqueror, William of St. Calais, Abbot
of the Monastery of St. Vincent in Normandy, generally called William of St. Carileph, was chosen to succeed Walcher, the first Norman
Bishop of Durham, who had been killed in a popular tumult at Gateshead. Though
brought up a secular priest, Carileph had become a
Benedictine Monk, and was strongly inclined to the discipline and order of the
monastic rule which he had adopted.
With
the sanction of Archbishop Lanfranc and the King, and by the authority of Pope Gregory
VII, Bishop Carileph made a most important change in
the Cathedral body. He displaced the secular Canons, who were the successors of
the monks who had accompanied St. Cuthbert’s Body from Lindisfarne, and who,
if the monk Symeon is to be relied upon, seem to have fallen from their
original institute and fervour.
In
their place he established the Benedictine monks from Wearmouth and Jarrow,
who had been restored to these monasteries, laid waste by the Danes, by
Walcher, Bishop of Durham. On the twenty-eighth of May they were introduced
into the church of St. Cuthbert, and “ there the Bull of the Apostolic Pope,
given by the authority of the Blessed Peter, chief of the Apostles, was
exhibited! to the assembled multitudes ”.
By
this Bull, and a charter granted by William the Conqueror, and witnessed by
Queen Matilda, Archbishop Lanfranc and others, and by another deed of Bishop
William de Sancto Carilefo, the grants which had been
made to St. Cuthbert were confirmed.
These
gifts comprised the churches of Hexham and Lindisfarne, and all the parishes
between the Tees and the Tweed; the town of Carlisle, and all the circumjacent
land; Teviotdale, and the whole district belonging to it.
By
the same charter the privileges and laws of St. Cuthbert were confirmed for the
second time, and to the Priors were granted all the honours and dignities of Abbots, with the Abbot’s stall on the left of the choir, and
the right to celebrate all the higher offices of the church in the absence of
the Bishops, and all the privileges, dignities, powers and honours enjoyed by the Deans of the Metropolitan Cathedral Church of York.
“When
this had been done, the Bishop recommended these monks to Mary, the most
blessed Mother of God, and to his holy patron, Cuthbert, and delivered over the
church to them, and them to the church.” Next, in the solemn Mass, he gave his
blessing to those persons who had promised that they would fix their residence
in this place, and he bound them by a link, which could not be severed, to the
Body of the most holy Father Cuthbert. Not long after this occurrence, this
great Bishop, not well com tent with the smallness and homeliness of the
existing Cathedral, determined to raise a new and magnificent church worthy of
the great see and its saintly patron.
BUILDING
OF PRESENT CATHEDRAL.
HAVING
made an arrangement with the monks, that they should undertake the building of
the monastery, he, on the eleventh of August, a.d. 1093, assisted by Turgot the
Prior, and Malcolm, King of Scotland, laid the foundations of the church which
we now see in all its stately beauty.
There
is something about this glorious cathedral which exercises a marvellous fascination over the minds of all, such as no
other edifice does. Whether it is owing to its unrivalled site, or to its
solemnity, and massive proportions of design and outline, or to the mystery
which hangs over the tomb of its saintly Patron, I cannot tell, but all writers
bear witness to the impression which it makes upon them.
First,
let us take the site.
What
church is there in Christendom which can boast of so striking a position ? The
river Wear, here broad and rapid, makes so sweeping a curve that the promontory
it carves out is almost an island. The elevated platform thus formed, rising
from the river banks, is clothed from base to summit with the foliage of
stately trees, and from the midst of these the massive foundations and
buttresses of the Galilee seem to grow out of the sheer perpendicular rocks,
and to make part of them, while high above rock and gable and roof, the
majestic Western towers, with their picturesque battlements, like twin giants
rise up one hundred and sixty feet, and over all grouping with them, but
dominating them, the great lantern of the central tower loses itself in the
bright blue sky.
The
historian of The Monks of the West, when this glorious vision met his
view for the first time, burst out into words of eloquent admiration and
wonder.
“This
magnificent building,” he exclaims, “with its three stories of arched windows,
its three towers, its double transepts, forms with the ancient castle, built by
William the Conqueror, a monument at once of religion and art as admirable as
it is little known. It can be compared only to Pisa, to Toledo, to Nurenberg,
or Marienburg. It has even a great advantage over all these celebrated places,
in the beauty of the landscape which encloses it. It is the sole existing
example of a splendid Cathedral situated in the midst of an old wood, on the height
of a rock, the abrupt descent of which is bathed by a narrow and rapid river.”
I
am at a loss to decide which is the best coign of vantage from which to view
this wondrous pile, for whatever point is chosen, seems, until you pass to
another, to present it in its grandest aspect. When the setting sun is shedding
a flood of crimson and gold upon pinnacle and tower, take your stand on the
elevated mound upon which the Railway Station is built, and the eye will
command a marvellous scene. At your feet lie the
Cathedral and Castle towering above river and wood and rock, and the straggling
city nestled close under the grey battlements of the Castle or creeping
tortuously up the long narrow street which leads to St. Giles Church. When you
have thought that it would not be possible to find anything more strikingly
grand and beautiful, pass over Framwellgate Bridge
and through the Market-place, and ascending Claypath and Gilesgate, descend again by the lane which passes
by the Training College, or mount to the top of Maiden Law, or to the hill upon
which stands the Observatory, from which the whole length of the Cathedral
extends itself before you, like some huge three-decker, stranded amidst the
fair pastures and sunny gardens which surround its Southern front, and you will
confess how difficult it is to say which view surpasses the rest.
After
you have satiated mind and eye by the site and exterior aspect, enter by the
great North porch,—and here one who is a thoroughly competent judge shall
describe for us the interior. “I assert and with confidence that no grander
Norman building exists. Peterborough, Ely, Norwich, and Gloucester in our
country, and the great Church of St. Stephen at Caen, magnificent as they are
in their earlier portions, shine with a diminished lustre,
when compared with the greater glories of Durham.
“I
will now make a still bolder assertion and say that no more impressing and
inspiring church is to be found in England, nay, I would almost say in Europe.
You may go where you will, you may tell me of the vastness of York, the
beauties of Lincoln, the varied and noble architectural features of Canterbury,
Winchester, and Lichfield, and the grace of Salisbury, but I say the Cathedral
Church of Durham is the grandest structure of them all! Taken in its parts and
looking at its wondrous solemnity,— I can use no other word,—at its beautiful
proportions and the admirable way in which a great design has been carried out
to perfection, Durham Cathedral stands unrivalled.”
Before
pulling down the old church built by Aldune, Bishop Carileph erected a handsome tomb in the Cloister Garth, at
the eastern angle of the present court, and opposite to the door which leads
into the monks’ parlour. In this the Body of St.
Cuthbert was deposited until the new cathedral was finished. This tomb
consisted of a large slab of free-stone, upon which was carved a full-length
figure of the Saint, vested in episcopal robes, with chasuble and mitre and crozier. Above this was a wooden pent-house,
enclosed with wooden stanchels and covered with lead,
like unto a little chapel or church.
The
cathedral commenced by William of St. Calais was completed by him as far as the
first large pier in the nave. After his death, in 1096, an interval of three
years elapsed before the election of Bishop Flambard in 1099. During this interval the monks went on with the church and built the
west side of the transepts and the vaulting of both. Bishop Flambard carried on the nave which had been begun by Carileph as far as the vaulting, which was completed by the monks after Flambard’s death in 1128, and before the accession of
Bishop Galfrid Rufus in 1133.
TRANSLATION OF THE BODY OF ST. CUTHBERT INTO THE CATHEDRAL OF DURHAM
AS
soon as the east end of Carileph’s church was
sufficiently completed, the venerable Body of St. Cuthbert was translated from
its temporary shrine in the cloister garth into its final resting-place in the
apse behind the high altar.
Very
full accounts have been handed down to us describing all the circumstances connected
with this translation, and some of them by eyewitnesses. First, there is the
long and minute description given by the Bollandists, and drawn from various
manuscripts. From these we learn that many differences of opinion prevailed as
to the place where the Body of St. Cuthbert was buried, and as to its existing
condition. Some venturous spirits threw doubts upon the reported fact of its
still being actually in the possession of the monks, saying that it had perished
during their many wanderings and flights, or had been secretly removed to some
other place. These reports shook the credit of the monks, and as none of them
had ever seen the Body of the Saint, filled them with alarm.
As
the day fixed for the translation approached, these secret whisperings of incredulity
increased, and found utterance from many of the persons who had been invited to
assist at the ceremony. The brethren thereupon came to the resolution to open
and examine the tomb, and report upon the state of its contents. For this
purpose nine of the elder monks were selected by the Prior Turgot. On the night
of the 26th of August, the ten visitors having prepared themselves by fasting
and prayer, prostrated themselves before the tomb, and, in fear and trembling,
commenced the work of opening it. When they had with much difficulty and labour lifted the outer covering, which was secured with
strong bars of iron, they found a chest of wood, carefully covered over with
leather, fastened to it with iron nails. After breaking open the chest, they
discovered a second coffin of black oak, carved over the whole of its surface
with figures of animals and flowers, and wrapped in a coarse linen cloth which
had been dipped in melted wax.
They recognised this chest to be the very one in which the
Body of the Saint had been placed at Lindisfarne, eleven years after his death.
Filled with joy and at the same time with terror lest in venturing to disturb
the sacred remains they might be visited with instant punishment, they fell
upon the ground and prayed earnestly that the blessed Saint would by his
intercession avert from them the anger of God, if they merited it by their
presumption. After this they almost unanimously determined to abandon any
further search, lest the vengeance of God should fall upon their rashness. But
Turgot, the Prior, insisted upon their proceeding, and the exhortations and
encouraging words of one of their number, whose saintly life gave him great
influence, having restored their courage and confidence, they set to work to
remove the chest from behind the altar, where it had up to this time remained,
into the middle of the choir. They then rolled back the cloth which covered the
coffin, and removed the lid. Instead of the Body of the Saint, they found a
copy of the Gospels placed upon an inner lid, which rested on three transverse
bars of wood, and covered the whole length and breadth of the coffin. By the
help of two iron rings fixed at the extremities, it was easily lifted, and
below it reposed the object of their search—the venerable Body of St. Cuthbert.
It was lying on its right side, wholly entire and flexible in its joints, and
resembling rather a person asleep than one dead. At the sight they were seized
with great fear and amazement, and retiring to a little distance, fell on their
knees, and striking their breasts, they raised their eyes to heaven and recited
together the Seven Penitential Psalms. Having finished these, they again
approached the coffin, and three of their number, by the order of the Prior,
placing their hands under the head, the feet, and the middle of the body,
raised it up and laid it down on a carpet spread on the floor. After removing
the numerous relics found in the coffin, no doubt those of the saintly Bishops
of Lindisfarne, which, as was narrated, were placed in the coffin on its first
removal, they again laid the Body in the chest, as the time for Matins was
near, and having chanted the Te Deum, they carried it
back to the place behind the altar from which they had brought it.
On
the following night the same visitors again assembled in the church, and by his
own request were accompanied by Bishop Flambard. The
venerable Body of the Saint was again brought into the middle of the choir, and
laid upon a cloth prepared for it. We are indebted to Reginald for a very
detailed description of its state, and of the robes in which it was clothed.
He
tells us that the Saint was of a tall and manly stature, yet neither too tall
or too short. That the limbs were all firm, flexible and perfect in all their
parts, that they were muscular in the sinews, flexible, with veins full of
blood, and with sweet and soft flesh.
The
Body was entirely enveloped in a very fine linen sheet, doubtless the one given
to the Saint by the Abbess Verca, and which he had
carefully preserved for that purpose. Over this appeared the usual episcopal
vestments, the amice, alb, stole, fanon, tunic, and
dalmatic; the chasuble alone was wanting, it having been removed at the former
translation in 689. On the forehead lay a gilt plate or band, richly encrusted
with gems, and a mitre covered the head, round which
had been wound a napkin of purple colour. A
cere-cloth of linen adhered so closely to his cheeks and face and venerable
head that it could not be raised in any part. The nose, the outline of which
could be seen through the tightly-stretched covering, seemed a little curved,
and his chin appeared as if in the lower bone it were furrowed with a double
division. This furrow extended to both sides, and a finger might have been put
lengthways into it. The space between the neck and the shoulders was partly
exposed, and the flesh was devoutly touched by some of those present.
With
the Body was found a silver altar, a corporal, a gold chalice, a paten, a pair
of silver scissors, and an ivory comb. These were replaced in the coffin, and
with them the head of St Oswald. The other relics of the Bishops of Lindisfarne
were collected and transferred to another part of the church. They then
enveloped the sacred Body, over the vestments, in a new winding sheet of silk,
and again carried the coffin back to its former place behind the altar.
The
next morning the discovery made the previous night was announced to the
brethren, and a solemn act of thanksgiving was performed to make known the
triumph of the monks, and to silence the doubts of the incredulous.
But
their joy, says the historian of the Anglo-Saxon Church, was interrupted by the
rational scepticism of the abbot of a neighbouring monastery. He charged the monks of Durham with
ill-judged rashness in daring to undertake so important and unusual an
investigation without consulting or inviting the presence of any of the neighbouring clergy.
What
guarantee was there for the truth of the statement made by those who were
interested ? Why not allow the coffin to be opened in the presence of the
strangers who had come to be present at the translation ? To do so would at
once remove all cause of suspicion, but to refuse it would naturally expose the
monks to the accusation of imposture and fraud. This unexpected demand, and the
scandalous insinuations which accompanied it, excited the indignation of the
monks. They exclaimed that their accuser was aiming either at the ruin of their
house or their expulsion from the place. They appealed to their character,
which had hitherto been unimpeached, and offered to confirm their testimony on
oath. “Far be it from us,” said they, “ to allow this man an opportunity of
seeing the sacred remains, through whose means the suspicion of a grievous
falsehood has fallen upon us; for of those who yesterday exultantly sang ‘
Glory be to God on high,’ some today, through the calumny of this abbot,
suspect us of a falsehood.”
Whilst
this contention was running to great lengths, and there seemed no prospect of
bringing it to a peaceful termination, Ralph, the venerable Abbot of the
Monastery of Seez in Normandy, and afterwards
successively Bishop of Rochester and Archbishop of Canterbury, came forward to
offer his services as mediator.
He
was a man of great meekness and piety and deeply versed in the holy scriptures,
and by his gentle and skilful pleading the Prior and
community were reluctantly persuaded to consent to a reexamination of the Body
of the Saint.
PUBLIC
EXAMINATION OF THE BODY OF THE SAINT.
ON
the morning of the very day appointed for the translation (the dispute being
thus happily settled) the following persons entered the oratory vested in albs, the Prior leading the way—viz. the above mentioned Abbot
of Seez, Richard, Abbot of the Monastery of St.
Alban, Stephen, Abbot of St. Mary’s at York, and Hugh, Abbot of St. Cermain at Ollesby (Selby). After
these came Alexander, brother of Edgar, King of Scotland, about to succeed his
brother in the Kingdom, and William, then chaplain of the Bishop of Durham, but
Archbishop of Canterbury after the above named Ralph. Then followed forty other
clerics, monks as well as secular clergy. In addition to these there were many
of the brethren of the church, for some were assisting the Bishop, who at that
very moment was consecrating an Altar in the Cathedral.
When
they had all devoutly offered up a prayer, the holy Body was brought into the
choir, where the coffin was opened by the brethren who had shortly before
closed it up.
The
Prior raising his hand strictly forbade any one, except the Abbot of Seez, to move a hand to touch either the Body or anything
about it. The rest he ordered to stand near, and ascertain the truth with their
eyes and not with their hands. The brethren of the monastery he ordered to
watch with vigilant eyes, lest any one in any way should abstract even a
particle of thread from the robes that enveloped the Body. His commands were
obeyed.
The
Abbot, Ralph, unfolding, with the aid of the brethren belonging to the church,
the coverings wrapped round the venerable head, raised it a little in both his
hands in the sight of all, and bending it in different directions, found it
adhering to the rest of the Body, with all the joints of the neck perfect. Then
taking hold of the ear, he moved it backwards and forwards with some degree of
force. And after this, examining with a scrutinising hand the other parts of the Body, found it with its nerves and its bones solid,
and covered with soft flesh. He also shook it, taking hold of the head, and
raised it so high that it almost appeared to sit in its quiet abode. Moreover,
that nothing might be wanting in his diligent investigation, he took care to
examine into the perfect state of the feet and legs. When therefore the devout
searchers had sufficiently, and more than sufficiently, examined the miracle of
its incorruption, raising his voice in the midst, he exclaimed, “ Behold, my
brethren, this Body lies here, lifeless indeed, but as sound and entire as on
the day on which the soul left it to wing its flight to heaven”. Then the
solemn and jubilant strains of the Te Deum resounded
through the vaulted choir and transepts, and the chest containing the Body of
the glorious St. Cuthbert was lifted upon the shoulders of the bearers, and
with the pomp of a splendid ceremonial, and amidst the tears and rejoicings of
the vast crowd which thronged the whole of the church, was borne through the
Northern porch.
The various caskets of relics, the remains of the Saints of Lindisfarne went before, and as soon as the venerable Body of the Saint passed into the open air, the vast crowd which thronged every part of the Palace Green from very joy burst into tears and fell prostrate on the ground, rendering it almost impossible for the procession to advance, “whilst,” says the anonymous author, “in honour of the omnipotent God a band of singers scattered their celestial peals on the gale ”. The
sight was a splendid one (says William of Malmesbury)
: the sky was clear, no black clouds deadened the beams of the sun. The monks
were all arrayed in the robes of their order, and there were long lines of men
going and coming, treading upon each other’s heels, from their intense anxiety
to view again and again the sacred bier.
The
procession made the circuit of the walls of the church, and entering it again
advanced to the eastern apse, where the Body was placed in the feretory, on the
spot upon which the shrine had been prepared for it. A high mass followed,
during which the church re-echoed to the solemn chant of the vast band of
choristers, and the people joined with one voice in the sublime liturgy of the
Church. When all was concluded, the immense crowd of the faithful returned
homewards with joy, “glorifying and praising God, for all those things that
they had seen and heard ”
This
translation took place on the 26th of August, 1104.
THE
EPISCOPAL SEE AND ABBEY CHURCH, FROM 1083 TO THE DISSOLUTION.
FROM
the year 1083, when they were first introduced by William of St. Calais, until
the year 1540, when the larger monasteries were dissolved, a period of 207
years, the Benedictine monks held peaceable possession of the Abbey of Durham.
It does not enter into my design to describe what Durham became during all
these centuries. The history of Durham and of St. Cuthbert forms a principal
part of the history of the North of England. The Prince Bishops were great
temporal sovereigns, emulating the power of the kings of England themselves.
They had their own courts of chancery, exchequer, and admiralty; they
appointed their own chancellor, justices, sheriffs, magistrates, laws, and they
possessed the right of coining money, and of pardoning treasons, murders,
felonies, and other crimes. The territory of the Bishops was called the “Bishoprick,” as distinguished from the rest of England,
which was divided into counties. The people of the Bishoprick were distinguished by the name of “Haliwercfolk—a holywork people,” as they constituted the guardians of the
sacred body of St. Cuthbert, and were not liable to service outside the limits
of the Palatinate. The mitred Priors of the Monastery
were peers of the realm, and had their seats in the House of Lords. The church
and monastery under their care, though not governed by an abbot, was entitled
to the appellation of Abbey. So great was the reverence for St. Cuthbert that
riches poured in upon the Church until it became well-nigh the richest Church
in Christendom. Every gift made to the See was considered as given to the
Saint, and all the vast possessions in land and money were called the patrimony
of St. Cuthbert, and were exempted from all taxes and all jurisdiction, except
that of the possessors. Two books were kept upon the high altar—the Liber
Vita’, or “Book of Life,” containing the names of the benefactors to the
Church, and another book, containing a list of the relics, ornaments, and vestments.
Some of these gifts were of the most costly description. Richard de Seybrook,
who was appointed shrine-keeper in 1383, mentions the following precious
jewels, reliquaries, and relics, which were preserved in the almeries:—A copy
of the Gospels, ornamented with gold, with a gilt crucifix; an image of the
Blessed Virgin, of silver gilt; a cross of gold, set with precious stones, with
a pedestal of silver gilt; a cup of silver gilt, the gift of the Countess of
Kent; the ivory sceptre of King Oswald; an Agnus Dei
in silver; a small enamelled coffer, containing the
chasuble of St. Cuthbert, in which he lay in the ground for eleven years at
Lindisfarne ; the book of the Gospels used by St. Boisil; an ivory casket
ornamented with gold and silver, containing the episcopal gloves of St.
Cuthbert; the skull of St. Boisil, in a shrine ornamented with silver and gold
and divers images ; bones of St. Aidan, Eadbert, Egfrid, and Ethelwold, bishops
of Lindisfarne; the body of Venerable Bede, priest and doctor.
“Besides that King Richard did give his parliamentary robe of blue velvet
wrought with great lines of pure gold, a marvellous rich cope, and another cope of cloth of gold was given to the same church by
another prince, so great was the goodly mind of kings and queens and other
great people for the love and great devotion that they had to God and St.
Cuthbert in that church. In a word, it was accounted the richest church in all
the land—in jewels and relics and ornaments.”
The
services of the church, too, were carried out with the greatest splendour and decorum. Many of the great functions are
described by the author of the invaluable record to which I have more than once
referred, and there is amongst the Chapter documents a most interesting letter
written by King Henry the Sixth, who came on a pilgrimage to the shrine of St.
Cuthbert on the 26th of September, 1448. Three days after his arrival in Durham
he attended the vespers, procession, and High Mass in the Cathedral, on the
feast of St. Michael, the Archangel, which happened to fall on a Sunday. On his
return homewards he wrote from Lincoln to “Master John Somerset” to express his
admiration for the way in which the services in the Cathedral were carried out.
“Right
trusty, and well beloved, wee greet you heartly well, letting you witt, that blessed be our Lord God, we have been right
merry in our pilgrimage, considering III. causes, one is how that the Church of
ye province of York and diocesse of Durham be as nobill in doing of divine service, in multitude of
ministers, and in sumptuous and glorious buildinge as anie in our realme. And
also how our Lord has radicate in the people His
faith and His law, and that they be as Catholic people as ever wee came among,
and all good and holy, that we dare say the first commandement may be riefied right well in them”
Many
interesting narratives are recorded in connection with the tomb of St.
Cuthbert, and Reginald, the monk of Durham, has written an elaborate work on
the admirable virtues and the marvellous graces and
miraculous cures obtained through the intercession of the Saint. This record
embraces the period extending from the conquest to the reign of Edward I. I
will make a selection of them which appear to be the most interesting and
edifying.
I
have already referred to the campaign undertaken by William the Conqueror in
order to reduce the brave Northmen to obedience. Two years later the King,
after a successful inroad into Scotland, on his return southward, took up his
quarters for a brief period in Durham, and whilst there he laid the foundations
of its famous castle. During his stay he naturally became much interested in
the history of St. Cuthbert, and made diligent enquiries as to whether the Body
of the Saint really rested in the Cathedral or not. In spite of the assertions
of all the members of the church, which were attested on oath, the King was
slow to believe, and at length resolved to satisfy himself of the truth or
falsehood of the story, openly threatening that he would put to the sword the
dignitaries of the Church if the Body could not be found. They were all seized
with terror, and had recourse to God to help them through the merits of his
servant Cuthbert. The festival of All Saints was appointed by the King for the
inspection of the tomb, and during the High Mass, which was celebrated by the
Bishop, the King was suddenly seized with a violent fever of so severe a nature
that he rushed from the church, mounted his horse and never drew bridle until
he had crossed the Tees. Tradition says that he rode in his flight down the
little street called Dun Cow Lane, and crossed the Wear by the King’s Ford.
In
an original charter preserved in the Treasury of the Dean and Chapter, there is
an account given in his own words of a miraculous cure obtained by the
intercession of St. Cuthbert, by Thomas, Archbishop of York, a.d. 1090.
“We,”
he writes, “having been for two years chastised by the scourge of God, and
dried up by fever and faintness after an incredible manner, when all
physicians held out to us nothing but death, when all the while there was
nothing which they could devise to sooth our pains, being warned by a vision, I
spent a whole night before the tomb of St. Cuthbert, groaning and wailing, and having,
from excess of disease and fatigue, fallen into a hasty sleep, there stood
before me, in a vision, Saint Cuthbert himself, who touching with his band my
limbs, one after another, and rapidly passing over the diseased parts of my
body, straightway roused me from sleep and restored me to health.”
The
next event which I shall mention took ’ place in 1346. In that year was fought
the memorable battle of Neville’s Cross, within sight of the walls of Durham.
In the night before the battle was begun, the 17th day of October, 1346, there
appeared to John Fosser, then Prior of the Abbey, a
vision commanding him to take the holy corporax cloth, “which was within the corporax wherewith St.
Cuthbert covered the chalice when he used to say mass; and to put the same holy relique upon a spear point, and next morning to
repair to a place on the west of the city, called the Red Hills, and there to
remain until the end of the battle ”. The monks obeyed the admonition of their
Patron, and stood during the whole of the day on the spot where the cross now
stands,
DESECRATION
OF THE SHRINE.
EVIL
days were now in store for England. The lust and avarice of the impious King
Henry VIII, had driven him to separate England from the centre of unity, and to covet the rich treasures with which the piety of his
predecessors and noble Englishmen, had for centuries enriched the Church of
God. In 1536 all the lesser monasteries which were dependent upon Durham—Holy
Island, Farne, Jarrow, Wearmouth, Finchale, Lytham,
Stamford, and her college at Oxford had been confiscated and annihilated by
the act 27th of Henry VIII, and now the blow fell upon the venerated mother of
them all, which, enthroned on her regal site, had borne the honours of well nigh 500 years upon her brow.
On
the 31st day of December, 1540, the Prior and Convent were compelled to surrender
their church and monastery and all their possessions into the hands of the
crown.
The
Royal Commissioners came to Durham sometime in the course of the year 1540,
and commenced the work of sacrilege by the plunder of the shrine. I will give
an account of their proceedings in the words of the compiler of the Rites of
Durham. My readers will agree with me that nothing could exceed the savage
brutality of those miscreants.
“The
sacred shrine of St. Cuthbert was defaced at the visitation held at Durham for
demolishing such monuments, by Dr. Lee, Dr. Henly, and Mr. Blithman.
They found many valuable and goodly jewels, especially one precious stone,
which, by the estimate of these visitors and their skilful lapidaries, was of value sufficient to redeem a prince. After the spoil of his
ornaments and jewels they approached near to his Body, expecting nothing but
dust and ashes; but perceiving the chest he lay in strongly bound with iron,
the goldsmith, with a smith’s great fore (forge) hammer, broke it open, when
they found him lying whole, uncorrupt, with his face bare, and his beard as of
a fortnight’s growth, and all the vestments about him, as he was accustomed to
say Mass, and his metwand of gold lying by him. When
the goldsmith perceived he had broken one of his legs he was sore troubled at
it and cried, ‘Alas, I have broken one of his legs!’ which Dr. Henly hearing,
called to him, and bade him cast down his bones. The other answered, he could
not get them asunder, for the sinews and skin held them so that they would not
separate. Then Dr. Lee stept up to see if it were so,
and turning about, spake in Latin to Dr. Henly, that
he was entire, though Dr. Henly, not believing his words, called again to have
them cast down. Dr. Lee answered, if you will not believe me come up yourself
and see him. Then Dr. Henly stept up to him, and
handled him, and found he lay whole; then he commanded them to take him down;
and so it happened, contrary to their expectation, that not only his Body was
whole and uncorrupted, but the vestments wherein his Body lay, and wherein he
was accustomed to say Mass, were fresh, safe, and not consumed. Whereupon the
visitors commanded him to be carried into the revestry,
till the King’s pleasure concerning him was further known ; and upon the
receipt thereof the prior and monks buried him in the ground under the place,
where his shrine was exalted.”
There
is another account of the same transaction given in a MS. in the library of the
Dean and Chapter of Durham, entitled, “ The origin and succession of the
Bishops of Durham,” written immediately after the death of Bishop Tunstall in
1559.
“It is to be remembered, that in the time of King Henry VIII., the sepulcre of St. Cuthbert, by certaine Commissioners of the said King, was opened, and the holy corpes of St. Cuthbert, with all things about the same, was found incorrupted, whole, sound, sweete, odoreferous, and flexable; the same was taken up, earryed into the Revestrie, vewed, touched, and searched by sundry persons, both of the clergye and others, and afterwards laid in a new coffin of wood; of which premisses many eye-witnesses were of very late, and some are yet, liveing.” These
testimonies to the incorrupt condition of the Body are decisively confirmed by
that of Harpsfield, Archdeacon of Canterbury, during
the reign of Queen Mary. At the time of the desecration of the shrine of St.
Cuthbert, he was a fellow of New Hall, Oxford. In his Hist oria Anglicana Ecclesiastical he gives a most minute account of the condition of the
Body of the Saint when the shrine was broken open and defaced. “When, by command
of King Henry the Eighth, the coffins of the saints were everywhere throughout
England plundered and broken to pieces, and their remains thrown into places of
disgrace, there was broken also the wooden coffin of this holy Body, which was
cased in white marble. And when he, who was deputed to dissipate and break in
pieces the sepulchre, had aimed a heavy blow at the
coffin, the blow fell upon the very Body of the Saint, and wounded its leg, and
of this wound the flesh gave presently a manifest proof. When this appeared,
and at the same time the perfectness of the whole body, unless the prominent
part of the nose, I know not why, was wanting, an account of the proceeding
was laid before Cuthbert Tunstall, then Bishop of Durham, and he was requested
to give orders as to what he wished to be done with the Body. In consequence,
by bis command, a grave was made in the ground, in that very spot previously
occupied by his precious coffin, and there the Body was deposited. And not
only his Body, but even the vestments in which it was clothed, were perfectly
entire and free from all taint and decay. There was upon his finger a ring of
gold, ornamented with a sapphire, which I myself once saw and handled, and as
it were a certain divine relic, more precious than any treasure, I clasped it
in a marvellous fashion and kissed it. There were
present, among others, when this sacred Body was exposed to daylight, Doctor
Whitehead, the president of the monastery, Doctor Sparke, Doctor Tod, and
William Wilan, the keeper of the sacred shrine. And thus it is abundantly manifest
that the Body of St. Cuthbert remained inviolate and uncontaminated eight
hundred and forty years?
Queen
Mary in 1554. By this nobleman it was given to Dr. Richard Smith, Bishop of
Chalcedon, who mentions these facts in his Flores Historiae Anglicance.
Alban
Butler states, in his Life of St. Cuthbert, March 20, that Bishop Smith gave
the ring to the English Canonesses at Paris. In their hands it remained until
the year 1858, when Cardinal Wiseman was fortunate enough to obtain it for St.
Cuthbert’s College at Ushaw. It was presented by the Cardinal to the College on
the occasion of the Jubilee Day, 21st of July, 1858. It is preserved in a
costly reliquary, and is worn by the Bishop of the Diocese when he ordains at
the College.
ST.
CUTHBERT’S BODY PLACED IN A NEW GRAVE UNDER THE PLACE WHERE THE SHRINE STOOD.
THE
shrine was finally removed in November, 1541, by John Symson,
who was paid two shillings for four days’ work. We learn also from the records
of the Chapter that the vault in which the Body of the Saint was buried was
begun about the 28th of December, 1541, and finished together with the marble
slab which covers it, soon after the Epiphany, at an expense of thirteen
shillings and elevenpence.
There
are certain points in the above narratives which are difficult to reconcile
with some of the statements made by Reginald, in his account of the appearance
of St. Cuthbert’s Body at the translation in 1104; but two facts seem to be
undoubtedly established, viz., that the Body of the Saint was incorrupt, and
that it was buried in a grave made to receive it, under the place where his
shrine had stood for so many hundred years. There is no record come down to us
that the vault was opened or the Body of St. Cuthbert disturbed from this date
until the year 1827.
THE
VAULT OPENED IN THE YEAR 1827.
ON
the 17th of May, 1827, the grave was opened in the presence of two of the
prebendaries of the Cathedral and the Rev. J. Raine. The last named published a
quarto volume giving a most minute and detailed account of the proceedings.
This work displays great research, and contains most curious and valuable
information; but it is much to be regretted that the intense bigotry—I can
use no other word—and violent animus of the writer detract from its merit. His
sole aim seems to have been to convict the monks of a gross and most wicked
imposture, maintained for centuries, in order to enrich themselves and aggrandise their church.
It
is not my intention to follow Mr. Raine into all the elaborate details of what
took place on the occasion of this investigation. It is sufficient for my
purpose to state that at the bottom of the third coffin or chest discovered in
the grave was found a skeleton, lying with its feet to the east, swathed apparently
in one or more shrouds of linen or silk, through which there projected, in
their respective places, the bone of the skull and the lower part of the leg
bones.
Were
these the remains of St. Cuthbert? Though it is impossible to give a conclusive
answer to this question, yet my readers will expect me to say something on a
matter of such surpassing interest to us all. I will, therefore, venture to put
together certain facts and inferences which may assist them in forming their
own conclusions.
First
of all we must remark that it may be taken as historically certain that the
Body of St. Cuthbert was buried in this grave under the spot where the shrine
had stood, within three years after the sacrilegous spoliation by the Commissioners of Henry VIII. This was done, according to the
statement made by the author of the Rites of Durham, by order of the King, but
Harpsfield says, by the direction of Bishop Tunstall. In the library of the
Dean and Chapter at Durham, there hangs, framed in oak, the original bill for
making the vault or grave in which the Body of the Saint was deposited. The
question of the identity of the skeleton found by Raine seems, therefore, to be
reduced to this—was the grave opened and the Body removed at any period
subsequent to this burial ?
FESTIVAL
OF ST. CUTHBERT IN 1448 AND 1887—A CONTRAST.
I
AM writing this on the feast of St. Cuthbert in the ancient city of Durham.
Before
we part, let me invite my readers to go back with me four hundred years and
more, and let us awake on the morning of the 20th of March, 1448, the very year
that King Henry VI visited Durham, and when the abbey church seems to have
attained its greatest splendour. From the earliest
dawn the whole city is astir and alive with excitement. The bells of all the
churches are ringing out their loudest and most joyous peals, for the young men
of Durham were famous, as Reginald tells us, for their skill as bellringers. St.
Nicholas’, St. Giles’, St. Margaret’s, and St. Oswald’s, and our Lady’s two
churches in the Bailey, are vying with each other which shall pour forth their
loudest and more sonorous tones; and overhead, and resounding above all the
rest, the great bells of the Galilee steeple, “never rung but at principal
feasts,” and of the majestic lantern, are flinging their full notes of melody
over the waters of the Wear. When we emerge into the streets, we find them
filled with a huge crowd, through which, with difficulty, we make our way. The
trades’ guildsmen are marshalling their ranks. The silversmiths, the saddlers, and
fleshers, from the streets which still bear their names, and all the other
companies and “occupations,” with their emblems and “their banners, with all
the lightes apperteyninge to these several banners,” are marching in order to the abbey gates.
Every
city parish church is sending out its choristers and clerics and its parishioners
headed by the processional cross and the banner of its patron Saint, and from
all the neighbouring towns and villages come similar
processions. The deans and canons of the collegiate churches at Chester-le-Street and Lanchester, Auckland and Darlington,
clad in their flowing linen surplices and ermined amices, with the Chapter
crosses borne before them, are advancing up the steep from Framwellgate Bridge. Bishops, earls, and barons, with their bands of liveried retainers and
men-at-arms, have left their castles to take part in the great festival.
When
we enter the church through the north porch, we find it all ablaze with light
and splendour. Banners are floating from every pier;
the seven-and-twenty altars are decked in their most sumptuous attire, and
before each stands a priest, in richly embroidered chasuble, offering to God
the adorable Sacrifice; whilst kneeling around, is a devout concourse of men
and women, eager to receive the most blessed Sacrament.
In
the Galilee chapel, which we turn aside to visit, the altar of Our Lady, with
its sumptuous reredos, “devised and furnished with most heavenly pictures,”
raised but a few years before by Cardinal Langley, and where “Our Ladie’s Masse
was sung daily,” is most richly adorned with flowers and lights, and “its
sumptuous and gorgeous furniture”; and the altars of Our Lady of Pittie in the
north aisle, and of St. Bede in the south, are also clothed for high festival;
and standing before his altar, is the shrine of Venerable Bede, with its “cover
of wainscott drawn up to show the sumptuousness
thereof”. From thence let us pass up the great nave, and before us stands,
stretching across betwixt two of the giant pillars “ supporting and holding up
the west side of the Lanterne,” the Jesus altar with
its high stone reredos, and over the altar, against the wall, “a most curious
and fine table with eleven leaves to open and close again’’ (like those
beautiful triptych so common in German churches), “all the hole passion of our
Lord Jesus Christ most richly and curiously sett forth in most lively coulors, all like the burning gold, as He was tormented,
and as He hungs on the cross “ On the height of the
walls behind this altar, from pillar to pillar, is the whole story and passion
of our Lord wrought in stone, most curiously and most finely gilt; and on the
height above all, upon the reredos, stands the most goodly and famous roode that was in all the land, with the picture of Marie
on the one side, and the picture of John on the other, with two splendent and glistening
archangels, one on the side of Mary, and the other on the side of John.”
Passing through the doors on each side of the Jesus altar, we see before us,
across the Lantern, the great stone screen of the choir filled with its gilt
statues of the kings and queens of England and Scotland who had been devout and
goodly founders and benefactors of this famous church. Through the open door we
obtain a view of the glorious choir, with its rows of exquisitely carved
stalls, and its magnificent high altar, behind which stretches across the
whole breadth the matchless screen—the gift of the Nevilles—filled from top to
bottom with its glittering images of alabaster, and emblazoned all over with
the Nevilles’ crest—the cross and bullhead—“Silver saltire upon martial red”.
The high altar, “the goodliest and most stately altar,” as is fitting, in all
the church, is now clothed in its most precious and costly ornaments, in
preparation for the solemn mass, “ quasi sponsa ornata viro suo”. Before it we
reverently bend our knees in adoration, “for three marvellous faire silver basins or lamps hung in chains of silver ‘ above the steps of the
altar,’ and ever burning both day and night in token that the house is always watching
to God,” proclaim that in that rich and most sumptuous canopy suspended over
the holy table, “whereon did stand a pelican, all of silver very finely gilded,
giving his blood to his youngeones, in token that
Christ did give His blood for the sins of the world, is a marveillous faire Pyx, of most fine gold, most curiously wrought of goldsmith work,” in
which is the treasure of the church, the most Blessed Sacrament.
After
paying this short visit to our blessed Lord, we follow the dense crowd which is
streaming along the north aisle, past the Blacke Roode of Scotland, containing
a portion of the cross of our Lord and encased in its costly reliquary of solid
silver taken from the Scots at the battle of Neville’s Cross, and ascend the
steps into the feretory. St. Cuthbert’s shrine stands before us, fully exposed
to view with all its priceless gems and offerings. Innumerable lamps and tapers
burn around it, and at an altar which adjoins the tomb at the west end, “upon
this great festival of St. Cuthbert only,’’ a priest is saying Mass. All the
almeries are open, and display the wonderful collection of the relics of many
saints, in their richly enamelled reliquaries of gold
and silver, “most marvellously chased and jewelled,” and all the gifts and jewels accounted to be the
most sumptuous and richest jewels in all the land.
Above
the heads of the devout kneeling throng, the captured Ancient and banner of
King David of Scotland, the banner of the Nevilles, and of other nobles,
presented to St. Cuthbert’s shrine after the battle of Neville’s Cross, wave to
and fro; and conspicuous among them is the banner of
St. Cuthbert, the glorious ensign of the church.
After
paying our devotions to God and His servant, we rise to make way for others;
but before we descend once more into the church, let us glance between the brattishing which surrounds the east and portions of the
north and south sides of the feretory, with its row of iron candlesticks “which
have lights set in them to give light to the monks when they said Mass at the
Nine Altars,” and we shall see at each altar a priest offering the holy Sacrifice,
and hundreds of devout worshippers filling the broad space of the eastern
transept, itself a noble church.
And
now the time has come for the crowning act of the day, the solemn High Mass, and
the great bell of the lantern announces the hour. As its last stroke falls upon
the ear, the “paire of organs’’ in the choir burst
forth, and from the arched door of the revestry in
the south aisle, issues forth a goodly procession, headed by the monastic cross
of gold, “and the staffe that it did stand on, to beare it withall, is all of
silver and goldsmith worke, very curiously and finely
wrought and double gilt Choristers and acolytes, and then the monks in all the riche copes that were in the church, as every monk had one,” walked two
abreast. These were followed by deans and canons of collegiate churches, and
the priors and abbots of neighbouring monasteries,
and behind them came the Lord Prior of Durham, “ in a marvellous rich cope of clothe of ffyne pure gould,
the which he was not able to goe upright with it, for
the weightines thereof, but men did staye it and holde it up of every
side, with his crutch in his hand, which was of sylver and duble gilt, with a rich myter on his head Then came the “epistoler and gospeller (deacon and sub-deacon) in tunick and dalmatic, and
the deacons and assistant chaplains, wearing the magnificent copes, one of blue
velvet, wrought with great lions of pure gold, his own royal mantle given to
the church by King Richard, and the other of cloth of gold, the gift of another
royal prince”; and last of all, the Prince Bishop himself, Robert Neville—son
of Ralph, Earl of Westmoreland and of the daughter of John of Gaunt—vested for
Mass, his train borne by a band of youthful scions of the great northern
barons, Hilton, Lumley, and Eure, amongst whom the heir of the proud house of
Neville holds a chief place. On arriving at the altar, the bishop intones the “
Gloria in Excelsis,” and the great and solemn rite proceeds to its termination.
When all is finished, the guests are all royally entertained in the Prater
House, for on this great festival of their patron, “the prior and the whole
convent did keep open house, and did dine altogether on that day, and on no day
else in the' year”. And so ends this great festival, which is of obligation
throughout the bishopric; and at once the whole scene vanishes like the
baseless fabric of a vision, and—
“
What seemed corporal, melted
As
breath into the wind,”
and
we find ourselves standing alone in the solitary Palace Green, on the 20th day
of March, in the year 1887.
The
old city lies at our feet, still and dormant. No sound gives token of high
festal! We push aside the heavy curtain and enter the cathedral. We cannot sign
ourselves with the blessed water from the marble stoup which stood against the
great pier facing the north porch, the emblem of the purity and internal
cleanliness with which men should enter God’s house, for long ago it was
converted into a kitchen sink by a quondam Dean of Durham. The solemn nave
stands before us, stately and cold, but where are the crowds which on this day
filled it to overflowing ? As we advance, we seek in vain for any sign of that
festival, the celebration of which our imagination has recalled. There are
neither lights, nor incense, nor silken banners. Rood screens and reredos,
and the images, glowing with gold and colour, of the
Holy Mother of God and His Saints, have been clean swept away. The altars upon
which, from early dawn until midday, the Saving Victim was offered, have been
cast down, and the anointed slabs used to pave the floor or broken to pieces to
mend the roads.
The
shrines of St. Cuthbert and St. Bede, and the relics of “men and women saints
of God,” have been desecrated, and their rich treasures of gold and jewels
squandered in luxury and debauchery. The banner of St. Cuthbert, the glorious
royal standard of the church and bishopric, has been cast into the fire by a
wife of a dean of the cathedral chapter. We look into the choir, but not
through the door of the exquisite screen. It was some time before the year 1660
ruthlessly and wantonly destroyed by puritanical violence. The silver lamps
which hung before the high altar are no longer there, and alas! that Divine
Presence, which, from Its pyx of gold, filled all the church with grace, and
light, and sanctity, has been cast out with contumely and sacrilegious insult.
There
is no longer an altar, nor priest, nor sacrifice; but in their place the words of that
unvarying, formal, and chilling service, which even the chanting of a carefully
selected and highly trained choir cannot render attractive, fall depressingly
on the ear. Speak to any of those who minister there, and they do not know, and
do not care to know, that to day is the chief festival of the great Patron of
this church.
All
that remains is the material edifice, still passing fair to look at, but it is
“the loveliness in death”. Its majestic proportions remain, but the glory of
the King’s Daughter which is within, has departed from it!
“
’Tis Greece, but living Greece no more ;
So
coldly sweet, so deadly fair,
We
start, for soul is wanting there ! ”
There
is only one consolation left to us, when blight and desolation have fallen on
all else : the sacred relics of our venerable Bishop and Father still repose
within its walls and under its vaulted roof. He is reigning with Christ, but
his affectionate tender heart still burns with love for his flock, his “angel’s face,” as Bede speaks, now bright with the reflection of the beatific
vision, looks down upon us, and his anointed hands are lifted up to bless and
plead for us.
Let
us then kneel down upon the marble slab above which his Body was reverently
enshrined for 500 years, and invoke him in the words of that collect which today
has been recited at every Catholic altar in dear England, and was on this his
feast most solemnly chanted from the high altar which stood at our side.
PRAYER
O
God, who by the priceless gift of Thy grace dost render Thy Saints glorious,
grant, we beseech Thee that by the intercession of Blessed Cuthbert, Thy Bishop
and Confessor, we may rise to the perfection of every virtue, through Christ
our Lord. Amen.
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