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CRISTO RAUL. READING HALL THE DOORS OF WISDOM

THE HISTORY OF THE POPES

 

 

THE LIFE AND TIMES OF POPE GREGORY I THE GREAT. A.D. 540 – 604

 

BOOK II. GREGORY'S PONTIFICATE. CHAPTER III.

The Dialogues.

 

Towards the close of the year 593 or in the spring of 594 Gregory, at the urgent entreaty of his friends in Rome, published, under the title of Dialogues a collection of stories, which for several centuries contributed more than anything else to make his name popular. In the Euchologion, indeed, and in Eastern books generally, the great Pope is designated "Gregory of the Dialogue". It is true that the genuineness of the curious work that we possess under this title has not been left unquestioned; but it is now generally admitted that the grounds for doubting it are entirely inadequate. Both the external and the internal evidence are almost as good as we could desire. In his correspondence Gregory himself alludes to a compilation he was making of stories of "the miracles of the Fathers which were done in Italy", and some of the legends of the Dialogues are found almost word for word in the Sermons. That he actually did complete such a compilation is asserted by Bede, Paul the Deacon, John the Deacon, the Papal biographer, and many others. Further, all the best manuscripts of the book we have, attribute its authorship to Gregory. The internal evidence, again, is scarcely less conclusive. The doctrine of the Dialogues, though it sometimes goes beyond, is nevertheless in harmony with the doctrine of the Morals and the Sermons. The style is certainly a little different, but not more so than we should naturally expect, since the most consistent author would necessarily express himself in somewhat different manners in a sermon, a letter, a theological treatise, and a book of tales. And, lastly, we observe in the Dialogues a number of little illustrative touches and allusions, which are quite what we should look for if the author was Gregory, but which would imply an unusual degree of literary skill in any writer living at a later time, who wished to pass off his book as the handiwork of the Pope. For these and other reasons the great majority of critics accept the ancient tradition, and agree in ascribing the four books of the Dialogues to Gregory the Great. The treatise was translated into Greek, but not with strict accuracy, by the order or (if John may be trusted) by the hand of Pope Zacharias (November 741–March 752), and in its Greek form was published throughout the East. Translations were also made into Anglo-Saxon (by Bishop Waerferth of Worcester) and into French.

The title of this curious work is, "The Four Books of the Dialogues of St. Gregory the Pope, concerning the Life and Miracles of Italian Fathers and concerning the Eternity of Souls". The second book is wholly devoted to the life of St. Benedict—the earliest biography of that saint which we possess —and some further account of it will be given in the chapter on Gregory's contribution to Western Monasticism. The fourth book is partly concerned with discussions of doctrinal subjects, such as Purgatory and the Holy Eucharist; and an exposition of Gregory's views on these matters will fall most appropriately into the Third Part of this work, which deals at length with his theology. The remainder of the Dialogues consists of a collection of marvelous stories—the visions, prophecies, and miracles of holy men who were either natives of Italy or at least sojourned in that country, and who were either still living when the book was written or else—at any rate in the majority of cases—had been living within the last seventy years.

Such collections of pious anecdotes formed the characteristic literature of the sixth and following centuries. For the mass of the clergy, as well as for the people, the legends served the purpose at once of poetry, theology, and history. They gratified and encouraged the vulgar love of the marvelous. They excited lively emotions of wonder and awe. They gave an account, which was implicitly believed, of those who were deemed the heroes of Christianity. They sometimes afforded amusement by an occasional humorous tale of demon or wizard. And, above all, they gave, or seemed to give, what the men of these times especially craved for—a proof of God's continual presence with His people, an assurance that even then, when evil seemed universally triumphant, the power of God was still put forth to punish and to save. Undoubtedly Gregory and others found in these legends a consolation and a hope ; un­doubtedly the stories of miracles wrought in their own country and in their own times appealed to them almost as strongly as the assurances of the Bible. For they seemed to show, as it were visibly, a divine Providence watching over the children of the true Faith, guiding and glorifying their lives on earth, and giving them certain prospect of the rewards of heaven. Hence we find that from the death of Gregory to the time of Charlemagne, the principal literary works which were written or read—at any rate in Italy and France—were narratives of the lives and miracles of saints. In hagiography the history, the theology, the poetry, the philosophy, the fiction of the period are summed up.

It is possible that besides the general motive of providing some edifying and entertaining literature for his friends, Gregory had a second and more special reason for the compilation of the Dialogues. His book was intended, it seems likely, not only as an illustration of God's power displayed for the consolation of His people, but also as a glorification of the Catholic Faith for the conviction of heretics and unbelievers. All those who performed miracles were Catholics, and many of the miracles were performed to frustrate the malice of Arians and idolaters. Moreover, Paul the Deacon tells us that the book was sent to the Lombard queen, Theudelinda, who was herself a Catholic, though married to an Arian. It is probable, therefore, that Gregory intended to demonstrate that, in spite of the apparent successes of the heretical Lombards, God was on the side of the orthodox, and manifested His power only through the orthodox; and he perhaps hoped that by means of his stories the queen's faith would be confirmed, and the wrong belief of the heretics around her would be put to shame and confuted.

As the title indicates, Gregory composed his work in the form of a Dialogue. This species of composition was not, of course, new. Both Jerome and Theodoret had made use of it in their polemical treatises, and Palladius and Sulpicius Severus had employed it for relating the histories of saints. Gregory followed their example, doubtless in order to impart a liveliness to his narrative, and also to provide artistically an occasion for sundry explanations and digressions. He represents himself, then, as conversing with a certain Peter; perhaps he had in his mind Peter the Subdeacon, whom we have already come across as the somewhat unsatisfactory rector of the Papal estates in Sicily. However this may be, the Peter of the Dialogues is skillfully depicted as a stolid, matter-of-fact man, with plenty of common sense, but little imagination, extremely inquisitive about the miracles wrought by his countrymen, yet inclined to be mildly skeptical until convinced by Gregory's arguments. He makes a very good foil to Gregory himself, and his questions and difficulties lead up naturally and artistically to the remarks and discussions which the author wished to introduce. We may add that this literary Peter was no doubt intended to represent, and did represent, the average ecclesiastic of the period, and his doubts and perplexities probably reflect pretty accurately the doubts and perplexities of most sixth-century churchmen.

The book opens with a scene in a Roman garden. "One day, when I was oppressed by the excessive burden of secular affairs, in which we are often obliged to spend more than is strictly due, I sought a retired spot, friendly to sorrow, and there all that was unpleasant in my occupations rose up clearly before my eyes, and I beheld as it were in a single glance all the causes of my disquiet. When I had been there a long time in deep affliction and in silence, there came to me my well-beloved son, Peter the Deacon, who from his earliest youth had been my bosom friend and the sharer of my studies in Holy Scripture. He, seeing me thus consumed with grief and sickness, exclaimed, 'Has any new trouble befallen? Why are you so sad beyond your wont?". Thereupon Gregory gave utterance to a long lament over his lost monastic peace, and the press of worldly business from which he was unable to escape, and he added that his sorrow was increased when he called to his remembrance the holy lives of "those men who with their whole minds had left this present world". Peter replied that he did not know of any in Italy to whom Gregory could thus allude. "I do not doubt", he said, "that there have been good men here, but I think that either they have wrought no signs and wonders, or else these signs and wonders have been so buried in silence that we know not whether they were wrought or not". Gregory answered that the day would not be long enough to tell all that he had heard or witnessed of the marvellous deeds of the saints; yet on Peter's entreaty he consented to relate a few examples. "Such things as venerable and holy men have told me I will now repeat; and to remove all occasion for doubt, I will mention in each case the source whence I derived my information. But I would have you know that in some instances I do not reproduce all the details of the communication, but only the general sense; in others, however, I preserve both words and matter. For some of my informants told their stories in very rustic style, so that a man of letters could not decently preserve their very words in his record."

The supernatural tales which follow may be divided into three classes—stories of visions, stories of prophecies, and stories of miracles.

(a) Stories of Visions.

These stories, of course, present no difficulties to the modern rationalist. That ignorant and superstitious people, living in a mystical world which they firmly believed to be haunted by legions of white-winged angels and fantastic demons, should have seen queer visions and dreamed strange dreams, is only what we should have been led a priori to expect. Even Gregory himself admitted, at any rate in the case of dreams, that some were occasioned wholly, and others partly, by natural causes. "Some dreams are caused", he said, "by the repletion or emptiness of the stomach, others by (diabolical) illusion, others partly by illusion and partly by our own thoughts." The revelations he believed to be most frequent with dying persons, though they were often accorded to people in good health. The following are among the more remarkable of the visions recorded.

A certain Jew was once travelling along the Appian Way from Campania to Rome. His road passed by Fondi, where there dwelt a bishop named Andrew, who was a good and chaste man, but who permitted a certain religious woman to live under his roof as housekeeper. When the Jew drew near Fondi, night was falling, and as he had nowhere to go, he determined to take shelter in a ruined temple of Apollo. But these pagan shrines had a bad reputation, and therefore (although he was a Jew) he took the precaution of protecting himself from demons by making the sign of the cross. Even so, however, he was too terrified to sleep. At midnight, as he lay awake, he suddenly beheld a crowd of evil spirits, moving before one who appeared their chieftain, and who took his seat within the temple. To this demon the other spirits did homage, and he inquired of each in turn what mischief they had been doing in the world. Whereupon one stepped forward and declared that he had been tempting Bishop Andrew in regard to his housekeeper, and had so far succeeded that the good man had been moved that very evening to give her an affectionate slap. The prince of the demons praised his servant highly, and made him great promises if he should finish his evil work; then, glancing towards the trembling Jew, he inquired who that presumptuous fellow was, who dared to lie in the temple. The evil spirits looked, and were amazed to find him marked with the cross. "Alas! alas!" they cried; "here is an empty vessel, but yet it is signed". With that they all vanished. The curious legend has a happy ending. The bishop, when he heard the story, turned away his housekeeper and every other woman in his household, and never afterwards had any inclination to fall in love. The Jew was converted and baptized, and the temple of Apollo was turned into a church and dedicated in commemoration of St. Andrew.

Paschasius was a saintly deacon of the Roman Church, "a man of great holiness, much given to alms deeds, a considerer of the poor, and a forgetter of himself". Unfortunately, he was a firm supporter of the anti-Pope Laurentius, the opponent of Symmachus; but he died in the highest reputation, and a demoniac was healed by touching the dalmatic on his bier. A long while after, Germanus, bishop of Capua, was ordered by his physicians to take a course of hot baths; and there, in the midst of the steaming vapours, he beheld, to his great horror, the deacon Paschasius. The spirit addressed the bishop and said: "I am appointed to this place of punishment for no other reason than because I took the part of Laurentius against Symmachus; and therefore I beseech you to pray unto our Lord for me, and by this token shall you know that your prayers have been heard, if at your next coming you find me no longer here". The bishop went away and prayed, and when he returned the spirit had vanished.

There was a nun of Portus who lived a chaste life, but was given to foolish talking. When she died she was buried within the church, and the same night the sacristan, "by revelation", beheld her body cut in two, and half of it burnt before the high altar. The next morning, Gregory adds, signs of the burning were discovered on the marble pavement. So again, when a certain defensor of the Milanese Church, named Valentinus, "a very shifty person, and addicted to every kind of levity", was buried in the Church of St. Syrus at Genoa, the sacristans beheld him dragged screaming from the building by two most frightful spirits. Next day the body was discovered in another tomb outside the sacred precincts.

A prettier story is told of a pious Roman shoemaker named Deusdedit, who worked hard all the week, and on Saturdays used to distribute to the poor at St. Peter's Church all that he had saved over and above his necessary expenses. A friend saw in a vision a house in heaven being built for this good man, but those who were building it worked on no day save Saturday.

The next tale is remarkable chiefly for its lack of point and meaning. Theodore, sacristan of St. Peter's at Rome, got up very early one morning to attend to the lamps that hung by the door. As he stood on a ladder pouring oil into the lamps, he saw beneath on the pavement the Prince of the Apostles himself, who said to him, "My fellow-freedman, why have you risen so early?" and then vanished. The unfortunate sacristan was so shaken by his fright that he had to keep his bed for many days after.

Some very curious devil-apparitions are related in the Life of St. Benedict. In one of the monasteries of Subiaco there was a monk who could not stay at prayers. In spite of frequent admonitions, he was in the habit of slipping out of chapel and wandering about, engaged in worldly thoughts. St. Benedict at length determined to take the matter in hand. So he came to the chapel and watched; and when the Psalms were ended and prayer began, he saw a little black boy pulling at the garments of the perverse monk, and leading him from the place. Then Benedict said to the Abbat Pompeianus and to Maurus, "Do you not see there who it is that is drawing this monk out?" But they replied, "No". "Then let us pray", said Benedict, "that you likewise may see whom this monk follows". After two days of prayer Maurus saw, but the abbat still could see nothing. "The next day, when the man of God had finished his prayer, he went out of the oratory, and found the monk standing outside, whom he forthwith hit with his staff. And from that time onwards the monk was free from the suggestion of the black boy, and remained constant at his prayers. For the old enemy, as if himself had been beaten with the whip, dared no more to take command of his thoughts."

Again, after Benedict had destroyed the temple of Apollo at Monte Cassino, the devil "appeared, not covertly or in a dream, but openly and visibly in the sight of the Father",—all afire, with flaming mouth and flashing eyes, raging against him. He complained loudly of the injuries he had received, calling the saint by name, "Benedict Benedict!" And when he got no answer, he cried, "Thou Maledict, not Benedict, what hast thou to do with me? and why lost thou persecute me?" Benedict alone beheld the fiend, though the brethren heard his words.

Another time, when Benedict was on his way to pray at the Oratory of St. John, he met Satan disguised as a physician riding on a mule, and carrying a horn and mortar. "Whither are you going?" asked the saint. "To give a potion to your monks", replied the devil. When Benedict got back to the monastery, he found that the devil had entered into one of the elder monks, tormenting him cruelly.

On yet another occasion, when Benedict was praying in his cell, the devil appeared to him, jeering at him, and saying that he was going to visit the monks at their work. Benedict at once sent a message to the brethren, saying, "Have a care, for the wicked spirit at this hour is coming to molest you". Scarcely had the message been delivered when the devil overthrew a wall which they were building, crushing one young monk under the masonry. In these stories we are already face to face with the mediaeval devil.

Near Monte Cassino there lived in religious retirement two ladies of noble parentage who were given to abusive language. Complaints of their conduct having reached Benedict, he sent them a warning, "Have a care of your tongues, for if you do not amend, I excommunicate you". But they took no notice of the warning, and shortly afterwards died and were buried in the church. After this their nurse, "who used to make offerings to our Lord for them", beheld a dreadful sight. For in the mass, when the deacon cried out, "If there be any that communicates not, let him depart", the two nuns, spectral and terrible, arose from their graves and left the church. This, according to the nurse's testimony, happened several times. At last recourse was had to Benedict, who "with his own hands gave the oblation, saying, Go, cause this oblation to be offered to our Lord, and they shall be no longer excommunicate." Thenceforward the troubled spirits were seen no more.

One vision recorded by Gregory is of an unusual character. Benedict sent some monks to build a monastery at Terracina, promising to come to them on a certain day. He remained, however, at Monte Cassino, but, on the night before the day appointed, appeared in a dream to both the abbat and the prior, and gave them minute directions concerning the new building.

Visions of the souls of persons just dead were not un­common. "Many of our time", writes Gregory, "whose spiritual sight is purified by undefiled faith and frequent prayer, have often seen souls departing from the body". Thus Benedict beheld the soul of his sister Scholastica depart in the form of a dove, and that of Germanus bishop of Capua carried to heaven by angels in a globe of fire; Gregorius, a monk at Terracina, beheld the soul of his brother Speciosus, when the latter died at Capua; some people sailing between Sicily and Naples saw the soul of a certain recluse carried up to heaven; some monks in a monastery six miles from Norcia saw the soul of their dying abbat fly from his mouth in the form of a dove; a hermit saw the soul of King Theodoric thrown down a crater at Lipari.

Most common of all, however, were visions vouchsafed to persons who were either destined to die or who were actually dying, and also to those who watched round the beds of the dying. These visions, however, are of too conventional a character to claim our attention here. Warnings of death are delivered sometimes by voices, sometimes by apparitions of the dead or of saints, in one instance by a vision of the Virgin Mary. One young monk of Portus received intimation of his approaching decease by seeing his own name written in letters of gold. Another monk of St. Andrew's, in Rome, was warned by a vision of a crown of white flowers. The death­bed visions are all of the same general type. The dying wrestle with dragons, or with black men of frightful aspect; they receive visits from angels, or saints clad in white, or from the Saviour; heavenly music sounds, and fragrant odours fill the chamber with perfume. Sometimes their dying senses perceive what is happening in other parts of the world, or in the realm of spirits which they are about to enter. We may read the same things ad nauseam in all the lives of the saints. We will, therefore, linger no longer over these stories of visions, but will pass on to the second kind of stories related in the Dialogues, the stories of prophecies.

(b) Stories of Prophecies.

Of these prophecies we may distinguish two kinds—those uttered by the dying, and those uttered by saints. Of the first kind Gregory writes: "Sometimes the soul itself, by reason of its subtle nature, foresees somewhat of the future; sometimes souls before their departure attain by revelation to the knowledge of things to come; sometimes when they are on the point of quitting the body, by heavenly inspiration they penetrate with the spiritual eye the secrets of heaven." Thus a Roman advocate knew on his death­bed that he would be buried in the Church of St. Xystus, and a dying servant foretold the names of all in the house who were going to die; a count of Civitavecchia, named Theophanius, foretold that a storm which was raging would cease for his funeral; Cerbonius bishop of Populonia predicted that those who buried him would receive no hurt from the Lombards.

The prophecies uttered by saints are more interesting. Sometimes, indeed, they refer to trifling events, as when Equitius of Valeria prophesied that he would not be allowed to obey a summons to Rome, or when Bishop Boniface foretold that his nephew would never succeed him in the episcopate. But occasionally they are of greater moment. Constantius bishop of Aquino was asked on his death-bed who would succeed him. He replied: "After Constantius a muleteer, after a muleteer a fuller. Alas for thee, my city! thou hast yet this to endure". When he died, Andrew was made bishop, who had once been employed in the stables; and after him came Jovinus, a fuller. Meanwhile Aquino had been so wasted with war and pestilence that, on the decease of Jovinus, no other bishop was elected.

By far the most remarkable of the prophecies, however, are attributed to St. Benedict. Three of these are extremely interesting. One was addressed to the Gothic king, Totila, and it ran as follows:

"Much evil doest thou;

Much evil hast thou done;

At least now give over thine iniquity.

Verily into Rome shalt thou enter ;

Thou shalt cross the sea ;

Nine years shalt thou reign, and die the tenth."

The second is the famous prediction about the fate of Rome. Said Benedict to the Bishop of Canosa, "Rome shall never be destroyed by the Gentiles, but shall be so shaken by tempests and lightnings, by whirlwinds and earthquakes, that it will decay of itself". "The mysteries of this prophecy", comments Gregory, "we now behold as clear as day, for in this city we see the walls demolished, houses overturned, churches destroyed by tempestuous winds, and buildings rotten with old age decaying and falling into ruin". The third great prediction of Benedict concerns the fate of the Monastery of Monte Cassino: "All this monastery which I have built, with whatsoever I have prepared for my brethren, are by the judgment of Almighty God delivered over to the heathen; and I could scarce obtain the lives of those in this place". The words were fulfilled when, in 589, Duke Zotto and his Lombards pillaged and burned the monastery, the monks, however, escaping in safety to Rome.

In criticizing these stories of prophecy I need only make one remark. It was natural and easy to attribute a power of foretelling future events to holy men, particularly when, as in the case of Benedict, they seem really to have possessed a kind of "second sight". It is to be observed, however, that, with two exceptions, all the alleged prophecies recorded by Gregory had been already fulfilled when he wrote. Of these two exceptions, one was a prophecy of the end of the world, the other the prediction of Benedict about the destruction of Rome—a prediction which certainly represented accurately the fate of Rome up to the time of Gregory, but which the history of the later centuries has falsified. These two prophecies are the only ones which it is possible to test, and the test proves them to be nothing better than wrong guesses. It is not unreasonable, therefore, to suppose that the other tales of prophecies fulfilled were mostly legends which grew up after the events which are said to have been prophesied. At any rate, in the absence of proof as to the genuineness of the prediction, such an explanation is the most intelligible.

(c) Stories of Miracles.

The miracles related by Gregory are, on the whole, less striking than the visions. A great number of them are merely the usual stories, such as we get repeated over and over again in monastic biographies. We have here the oft-told tales of fish miraculously supplied to an ascetic on a fast-day; of great rocks arrested or removed by prayer; of a saint rendered invisible to his enemies; of poison made innocuous by the sign of the cross; of lamps lighted without hands or burning without oil; of wild beasts, birds, and reptiles gifted with miraculous intelligence; of glass and crockery smashed and made whole; of provisions miraculously provided or increased; of raging fires stayed; of sick persons and animals healed; of dead bodies raised to life or miraculously preserved, or singing, or moving, or undergoing unnatural transformation in the tomb; of springs produced by prayer, and rivers altering their courses; of second sight; of the casting out of devils. The compilers of miraculous histories had no great imagination, and they were mostly content to embroider on a few well-worn themes. The anecdotes of Gregory, at any rate, are not very original. I will, however, give one or two of the best of them as samples.

The gardener of a monastery, finding that a thief stole his vegetables, set a snake to watch the place in the hedge where the thief was wont to break in, saying, "In the name of Jesus I bid you keep this passage and suffer no thief to enter". The snake stretched itself obediently across the way, and the monk then returned to his cell. Presently, when the brethren were all taking their midday siesta, the thief came; but just as he was climbing in, he caught sight of the snake. In his fear he fell back, and his shoe catching in a stake, he was hung up head downwards, without any means of extricating himself from his position. The snake meanwhile continued to watch him until the gardener returned and dismissed it from the duty .

The next story taken from the Life of Benedict is somewhat curious. One day at Subiaco, the little monk Placidus, the future Apostle of his Order in Sicily, went to the lake to draw water, but overbalanced himself and fell in. Benedict, who was sitting in his cell, was supernaturally aware of the occurrence, and cried out hastily to his disciple Maurus: "Run, Brother Maurus, for the child who went to fetch water has fallen into the lake, and the stream has carried him a great way". Maurus ran down to the edge of the lake, and then, "thinking still that he went upon dry land, he ran upon the water", caught the drifting boy by the hair and brought him safely back. It was only when he stood again on the firm ground that Maurus realized that a miracle had taken place, and "much astonished, he wondered how he had done that which knowingly he would not have dared to venture". He therefore imputed the miracle to the virtue of Benedict, while Benedict on his side attributed it to Maurus's prompt obedience. The friendly contention in humility was finally settled in favor of Benedict by a declaration of Placidus "When I was drawn out of the water I thought I saw my abbat's garments over my head, and imagined that it was he who drew me out."

Boniface, a bishop, was very poor, his whole revenue being derived from a single vineyard. But as he was very charitable, he could never bring himself to deny a poor man who asked for alms. Now, there lived in the same house with him an ambitious priest named Constantius, who was nephew to the bishop, and desired to become his successor. This man, in order to get money to help him in his future candidature, had sold his horse for twelve gold crowns, which he kept locked up in his chest. One day, when Constantius was away, some poor people came to beg of Bishop Boniface, who, having nothing of his own to give them, went to his nephew's chest, forced the lock "with pious violence", and distributed the crowns among the beggars. Later on Constantius returned, and, finding his money gone, bitterly reproached his uncle. "All can live comfortably here except me", cried he. He raised such a din that all the household ran to his room. The good bishop tried to soothe him, but he only became the more abusive, shouting out, "Everyone can live with you except me. Give me back my money!" At last the bishop, in great grief, went to St. Mary's Church, and, holding his vestment in his outstretched hands, he prayed to the Virgin to give him some money to quiet the frantic priest. Casting down his eyes upon his vestment, he suddenly found in it twelve golden crowns "as bright as if they had come that hour from the mint". These, therefore, he took, and flinging them down before his nephew, he said, "There is your money that you have made such a stir about. But know that, for your covetousness, you shall never after my death be bishop of this place." The story adds that the bishop's words came true, and Constantius remained a presbyter to the end of his life.

Two monks of Valeria were hung by the Lombards from the branches of one tree. When evening was come, the souls of both began to sing most clearly and distinctly, so that both the Lombards themselves and many captives in the place heard the music.

In the time of Ambrose there lived in Piacenza a bishop named Sabinus, a man of wonderful virtue. One day he was informed by his deacon that the river Po had overflowed its banks and flooded the Church lands. The bishop said, "Go and say to the river, The bishop commands you to retire and keep within your bounds." But the deacon burst out laughing, and would not obey. Then Sabinus summoned a notary and dictated the following letter: "Sabinus, servant of the Lord Jesus Christ, sendeth warning to the Po. I command thee, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that thou exceed not thy channel in such and such places, nor presume any more to damage the lands of the Church." This missive was flung into the stream by the notary, and the river at once retired from the estates mentioned. A somewhat similar story is told of Frigdianus bishop of Lucca. The river Serchio, which flowed near the town, was constantly doing damage by its floods, and the inhabitants failed in their efforts to divert its course. At last the bishop took a little rake to the bank of the river, and, after praying to God, he ordered the river to follow the channel he marked out with the rake. The Serchio obeyed, and never afterwards flowed in its old bed.

A priest of Valeria, named Stephen, returning one day from a journey, said carelessly to his servant, "Come, you devil, take off my stockings." Immediately invisible hands began to unloose his garters. The priest, in great terror, cried out, "Away, foul spirit, away! I spoke not to thee, but to my servant." So the devil departed, leaving the garters half untied. "Whence we may learn", Gregory moralizes, "that if the old enemy is so ready in things pertaining to our body, he is yet more eager in watching the thoughts of our hearts."

Florentius of Norcia once found his cell beset by innumerable snakes. He prayed to God to relieve him of the pest; whereupon it thundered, and every snake was killed. Then the poor hermit prayed again, "Behold, Lord, Thou hast killed them all; but who is to carry them away?" Scarcely had he spoken when a flock of birds flew up, and each bird bore away a serpent in its beak, leaving the hermitage quite clear.

The last anecdote I shall quote illustrates the popular opinion as to the danger of offending a man of sanctity. Some Goths, who were journeying to Ravenna, once kidnapped two little boys from a place in the neighborhood of Todi. When Fortunatus, the bishop of that place, heard of it, he sent for the Goths, and addressing them with courtesy asked them to name any sum they chose as a ransom, and to restore the children. But the leader replied, "Anything else you ask we will do, but we will on no account restore the boys." The bishop then insinuated a threat: "You grieve me, my son, for that you do not listen to your father; do not grieve me, lest you suffer for it." But the Goth only repeated his refusal and went off. The next day the bishop renewed his entreaties, with no better success; and when the barbarian left his presence exclaimed, "I know that you will suffer for leaving me thus in grief." However, the Goth gave no heed to the warning, but sent the children on with his men, and himself mounted and rode after. But before he had passed the city wall, by St. Peter's Church, he was thrown from his horse and broke his hip-bone. Being carried back to the inn, he sent in haste to recall the children, whom he ordered to be taken to Fortunatus with the message: "Behold, you have cursed me and I am punished; receive the children whom you asked for, and intercede for me." Fortunatus then relented, and the Goth was healed by a sprinkling of holy water.

The miracles of the Dialogues are of great interest to a student of the supernatural, because at first sight they seem to be extremely well attested. To begin with, they were related of people who had been living within the century, and whose lives and actions, therefore, were still remembered by many. A false story, then, might easily have been detected. Again, they were related by people who were still living, were well known, and were, in many instances, eye-witnesses of the events recorded. The names of these authorities are given in full by Gregory, and in the great majority of cases they are names of persons whom we cannot for a moment suspect of deliberate fraud. Again, there are indications that Gregory himself did not rashly accept every miraculous tale he heard, but made some attempt to sift and investigate. He reports in the Dialogues only such tales as he had reason to believe were true.

The evidence for the miracula, then, seems at first sight fairly strong. But if we look into it a little more closely, we shall find that it is not so good as it appears.

First, it would be a great mistake to suppose that in the sixth century a few years would be insufficient to permit a legend to grow up round the name of a saint, or that such a legend would be at all likely to be confuted or shown up. The contrary was the case. The minds of the people of this period were predisposed in favor of the miraculous. Not only was every unusual phenomenon at once attributed to supernatural agency, but even ordinary events were explained on a supernatural hypothesis, if there was the slightest excuse for doing so. The age, immersed in theology, judged everything by the theological standard; the theological explanation of things seemed more credible, more simple, more (if I may so say) natural, than any explanation that the science of the time could offer. Hence miraculous accounts were neither softened down nor explained away. They were entirely in harmony with the prevailing habits of thought, with the prevailing conception of human experience. The wonder to the men of this time was, not that a saint should work miracles, but that he should not do so. Any miraculous account, therefore, was accepted almost without question as perfectly credible, probable, and even ordinary.

Secondly, the authorities quoted by Gregory cannot be regarded as having much weight. In some few instances, indeed, we may be justified even in suspecting them of deliberate falsehood. Take, for example, the case of Gregory's informant concerning the miracles of Fortunatus of Todi. "A certain poor old man was brought to me—because I always love to talk with such men—of whom I inquired his country, and hearing that he was of the city of Todi, I asked him whether he knew Bishop Fortunatus. He said he knew him very well. Then I beseech you, said I, tell me whether you know of any miracles that he did, and, since I am very desirous to know, explain to me what manner of man he was." In reply to this leading question, the poor old man related a miraculous story. Gregory continues: "When the old man had told me this strange story, he was ready to proceed to others, but as I was at that time to preach to some who expected me, and the day was far spent, I could not then hear any more of the acts of the venerable Fortunatus. And yet if I could, I would never do anything else than listen to such excellent stories."' We cannot here help suspecting that the unnamed poor old man, finding the great Bishop so eager to listen to his recital, thought it no harm to draw a little on his imagination, and we are not the least astonished when we find that on the next day he had a yet more marvelous tale to pour into the ears of his interested patron. It may be admitted, however, that in the great majority of cases the authorities spoke in good faith. It is quite incredible that distinguished bishops, abbats, clergy, and monks should have all conspired to invent fables to deceive the credulous Pope. Yet even if we grant that Gregory's informants were men of good character and position, even if we grant that they had opportunities for personal observation or for collecting evidence from those who had observed, we have, nevertheless, no means of judging how far they possessed the power of accurate observation, or of reporting accurately what they had observed or collected without drawing inferences of their own, and without adding any supplement or interpolation. An unusual event inaccurately observed might easily be regarded as a miracle, and if, in addition to this, it was carelessly reported, its miraculous character might easily be emphasized. Now, when we remember that these informants were predisposed to detect the miraculous in the most ordinary events, and moreover, that in many cases the miracles they related were attributed to saints whose disciples they had been and whose memory they wished to glorify, we cannot help regarding their evidence with grave suspicion. At any rate, we have at this time no means of testing it. The most we can say is that Gregory himself regarded it as sufficient.

And this leads me to remark, thirdly, that Gregory is not at all to be trusted as a critic of evidence. It is quite true that he did investigate to some extent the histories related to him, and satisfied himself, at any rate, of their truth. But what satisfied Gregory does not by any means satisfy us. He tells us that he felt bound to believe the stories of his revered and pious elders as certainly as if he had seen the events related with his own eyes; and again he says that he learnt certain things "from the relation of such very religious persons, that I cannot have any doubt whatever of the truth." Now this means that Gregory was satisfied if he was assured of the good character of his informant. He looked, not to mental, but to moral qualities as the guarantee of truth. If the witness was honest, Gregory was content to believe him trustworthy. This moral criterion, however, is, of course, insufficient, and it is quite certain that Gregory, by relying upon it, was betrayed into serious errors.

Of the many miraculous stories recorded in the Dialogues, only three can be tested by independent evidence. And of these three, the first, as it now stands, is entirely unhistorical; the second relates inaccurately an event which, as is now acknowledged, was not necessarily miraculous; while the third introduces into history a supernatural element, which is noticeably absent in the accounts of the best authorities.

The first is the celebrated story of Paulinus of Nola. It relates that when the Vandals devastated Campania, they carried off, among other captives, the son of a poor widow. Paulinus, to whom the widow came for help, could give no money to redeem the son; but, in lieu of that, he went himself to Africa, and voluntarily took the man's place as slave to the son-in-law of the Vandal king. When by a miraculous circumstance his true position was discovered, he was honorably sent back to Italy, and carried with him all the captives of his own city, who were set at liberty at his request. It is a charming tale of humility and self-devotion, but unhappily it all turns on the supposition that in the time of Paulinus the Vandals devastated Campania, and carried off their captives to Africa; whereas, in fact, the Vandal invasion of Italy did not take place till nearly twenty years after Paulinus’s death. A desperate attempt has been made to save the credit of the story by supposing that by "Vandals" Gregory meant "Goths". But in that case the details of the narrative would be obviously incorrect. It would be a less violent hypothesis to believe that in the time of the Vandals someone named Paulinus actually did what Paulinus of Nola is said to have done, and that in aftertimes the story got transferred from this unknown person to his more celebrated namesake. In any case, it is certain that Gregory made a serious mistake, which, by a little care, he might easily have avoided.

The second story relates how certain African Catholics were able to speak after their tongues had been cut out—a fact, the truth of which is now universally admitted, but which, it has been convincingly shown, can be referred to a natural cause. In his narrative Gregory makes the extraordinary mistake of placing the event in the reign of Justinian, and in the details he differs considerably from the accounts of those who were contemporaries. He seems to have picked up the story casually at Constantinople, and to have committed it to writing without even taking the trouble to test it by reference to the original authorities.

Thirdly, the account which Gregory gives of "the martyrdom" of Hermenigild cannot be credited for a moment in view of the silence of the Spanish historians, and the glaring inaccuracies of the narrative itself. It is pure fiction.

It is clear, then, from these three cases—the only ones which admit of being tested—that Gregory was often content to accept the evidence of persons whom he thought he could trust, without taking pains to verify and confirm their assertions. It may further be shown without difficulty that even in cases where he had an opportunity of personally investigating the miraculous powers accredited to saints, he was perfectly satisfied with the scantiest and most inadequate amount of proof. I am led to this conclusion by two instances in the Dialogues. (1) Gregory, as he believed, was enabled to fast on Easter Eve in consequence of the prayers of Eleutherius. Few people would consider this circumstance a proof that Eleutherius could raise the dead. Yet to Gregory it was: "Thus I proved by my own experience that he had really done the acts of which I was not myself an eye-witness." (2) In the diocese of Tivoli, a wild and mountainous district, there lived a presbyter, Amantius, of whom wonderful tales were told. Like the Apostles, he laid his hands upon the sick, and the diseases, however severe, disappeared at his touch. The forest serpents, when he made the sign of the cross over them, died at once. If a snake fled into a hole, he made the sign of the cross over the hole, and immediately the snake came out already dead. Of these miraculous powers Gregory wished to have a proof: he accordingly sent for Amantius, and placed him in a hospital where there were many patients. In this hospital the presbyter remained some days, and on one night, by prayer and laying-on of hands, he succeeded in calming the phrenzy of a patient who was deranged. Now, if an English clergyman with such a reputation for miraculous powers were placed for some days in a London hospital, and in that time only succeeded in quieting one lunatic, his pretensions, to say the least, would be somewhat discredited. But that was not the way that Gregory and his contemporaries judged. "From this one act of his", says Gregory, "I learnt to believe all the stories I had heard of him."

My conclusion is that Gregory had no capacity either for weighing and testing evidence brought forward by others, or for drawing correct inferences from what fell within his personal observation. Further, since Gregory was certainly the most intelligent Roman of his age, it is safe to attribute a similar or even greater incapacity to the original authorities he quotes. Hence I can only regard the supernatural stories, which proceed, either from Gregory himself or from these authorities, with the gravest suspicion. And it certainly does not lessen that suspicion to note that of all the many miracles recorded in the Dialogues, hardly any were performed in Rome. Gregory does indeed say, "If I should attempt to relate all that I have known happen at St. Peter's Church, I should have no time to speak of anything else." But the only Roman miracles he actually records are the healing of the lunatic by Amantius, and the healing of a paralytic girl by a sacristan of St. Peter's, named Acontius. Thus we are asked to believe that in all parts about the city monks and abbats and presbyters and bishops were performing innumerable marvels, but that in Rome itself, the sacred city, either no miracles to speak of were performed, or those which were performed were not of sufficient interest or importance for Gregory to note them down. This is indeed strange; and all the more so because, as soon as eminent Romans left Rome and got to a distance, they are reported to have worked miracles (e.g. Pope John healed a blind man at Constantinople, and Pope Agapetus healed one who was dumb and lame in Greece); and further, because directly we pass from the subject of miracles to that of visions, nearly one half, and certainly the most beautiful of those recorded, are ascribed to persons living in Rome. It certainly looks as though the miracle stories could not bear the light of investigation by one upon the spot, even when that one was by nature so ready to believe as Gregory.

With the modern reader, then, the legends of the Dialogues will scarcely pass as strict records of fact. They are, however, of great historical interest, as faithfully reflecting the customs, manners, and beliefs of the Italians of Gregory's day. Just as Boccaccio's Decameron mirrors the life of the fourteenth century, so the Dialogues reveal the life of the sixth—the life of Italian peasants, monks, and bishops in the villages and small episcopal towns, as well as the life of the citizens of Rome. From this point of view the book is a most valuable source of information on the period; second, indeed, to none save the collection of Gregory's letters. It is a magazine full of curious matter, which well repays investigation. Here, however, I can but touch on a few points of interest, which throw some light on the life and manners of the Gregorian age.

The country, according to the representation in the Dialogues, had for long been in a very disturbed and unsettled condition. First the Goths, and then the Lombards, had devastated the rural districts. Barbarians in bands or else in twos and threes roamed about, pillaging or murdering all who were not strong enough to resist them. The roads were unsafe, and unprotected travelers were in danger of being robbed. Children were kidnapped and carried off, even from the midst of towns. Sometimes towns themselves, such as Aquino or Populonia, were ravaged. Monasteries which were reputed wealthy were frequently attacked, the monks being either killed or put to the torture. Gregory represents both Goths and Lombards as persecutors. The latter, on one occasion, murdered forty peasants, because they refused to eat meats sacrificed to pagan gods; on another, slew four hundred people who would not adore the goat's head, which the Lombards, "according to their custom, sacrificed to the devil, running round it in circles, and dedicating it with blasphemous songs"; on another, hung up two monks on one tree, and again beheaded a deacon.

Sometimes, however, they were on friendly terms with Catholics, as e.g. with Sanctulus of Norcia, to whom they presented all the captives they had taken. In Spoleto, it seems, the principal church remained in the possession of the Catholics, and when a bishop of the Lombards, an Arian, endeavored to seize it by violence, he was struck with blindness in punishment of his daring.

Besides the barbarian soldiers, the country was infested with thieves and beggars. The attention of these people was particularly directed to the monasteries, and there are some amusing stories in the Dialogues which relate how they were themselves occasionally trapped. Thus some thieves once broke into the garden of the monastery of Isaac the Syrian, but found themselves compelled by a supernatural impulse to work hard at digging the whole of the night. In the morning the abbat came out, and, with a twinkle in his eye, said to the perspiring burglars: "Rejoice, my brothers; you have worked well: now you may take a rest". He then gave them some breakfast, and sent them away with his blessing and a present of vegetables. Some beggars, again, hoping to obtain clothing from the holy Isaac, hid most of their garments in a tree, and, after tearing and spoiling the rest, presented themselves at the convent in a miserable plight. The abbat, who knew of their doings, sent one of his monks quietly to fetch the clothes from the tree, and then presented them to the beggars, saying, "Ye are naked; come, take these garments and clothe yourselves." The men, recognizing their own things, went away in great confusion.

The monasteries were the most prosperous institutions of the age—havens of refuge for the destitute and oppressed. When the monks were not being harried by the Lombards, they led a peaceful, and for the most part a happy life. We see them generally engaged in some kind of manual labor—tending their gardens, mowing hay in the fields, building walls, baking bread, gathering olives, looking after the oratory, cleaning the lamps, and so on. In one case only do we find an instance of monks engaged in copying manuscripts. Often people of high position withdrew into monasteries; serfs bound to the soil were not received until their landlord's permission was obtained. We occasionally meet with bad communities, like that of Vicovaro; but most of the monks in the Dialogues are estimable men. A feature of the monasteries was the garden, always carefully tended; many possessed their own oliveyards or vineyards. In bad years the brethren were sometimes sent out into the neighbouring oliveyards to gather fruit, being paid for their trouble with a little of the oil. But this expedient was rarely resorted to, as it was thought to be unsettling to the monks.

The power of the abbat, even over the officials of the monastery, was absolute. We read, for instance, of one abbat of Fondi who lost his temper with his prior, and fell to beating him, first with his fists, and afterwards, since a rod was not handy, with a footstool. Though the prior was knocked about until he was black and blue, he made no remonstrance, but when the abbat had finished, went quietly to bed. The next day, when his bruises were noticed, he merely said, "Yesterday, for my sins, I came in contact with a footstool, and got the injury you see."

The rule of poverty was, of course, strictly observed, and excessive abstinence was regarded as a merit. Sometimes, however, monks obtained an undeserved reputation for austerities. In the monastery of the Galatians at Iconium there dwelt one who was renowned for fasting. When he was dying, the brethren assembled round his bed, expecting to hear something edifying from so good a man. But to their astonishment he said, "While you thought I was fasting with you, I was really eating in secret, and so now I am given up to be devoured by a dragon." To eat on the great fasts was held to be a sin. Good men, moreover, were expected to look pale and ascetic. There is a droll anecdote of Cassius bishop of Narni, who had the misfortune to be high-coloured in face. When Totila saw him he at once concluded that he was a drunkard, and despised him accordingly. It needed a miracle to vindicate the poor bishop's reputation.

Some of these monks were brave men. An abbat of Sora, being warned by fugitives that the Lombards were coming, at once distributed among them everything the monastery contained, even to the contents of the garden. When the barbarians arrived and demanded treasure, he was able to say with truth that he had absolutely nothing to give them. The courageous abbot paid for his temerity with his life. He was taken to a wooded hill and cut down with a sword. When the body fell, it was said "the mountain and wood were shaken, as though the earth could not bear the weight of his holiness."

We have a delightful sketch of Equitius, the preaching abbat of Valeria. He had such a zeal for saving souls that he would travel up and down the country, visiting towns, villages, churches, and private houses, and trying by all means "to stir men's hearts to the love of the heavenly country." This ardent missionary presented a quaint and uncouth figure. His dress was so coarse and shabby, that many who did not know him disdained even to reply to his salutation. He rode upon the worst beast that could be found, with a halter for bridle, and for saddle a sheep's skin; on right and left hung leather bags stuffed with parchments of the Holy Scriptures. Everywhere he went "he opened the fountain of Scripture and watered men's souls with his sermons". But this queer evangelist had never received a license to preach, and his growing fame filled the Roman clergy with jealousy. They went, therefore, to the Pope, and persuaded him to summon Equitius to Rome to give an account of his doctrine. So a certain Julian, who was afterwards made bishop of Sabinum, was despatched post-haste to bring Equitius with all honor to Rome. When this man arrived at the monastery, he found some "antiquarii" writing, who told him that the abbat was in the fields making hay. Julian, therefore, sent his servant—an intractable and bad-tempered fellow—to give notice of his arrival. He found a number of monks hard at work haymaking in the meadow, and he asked one of them disdainfully to point out the abbat. But so soon as he set eyes on Equitius his bad spirit was subdued, and, trembling greatly, he bowed himself before him and embraced his knees, telling him that his master desired to speak with him. Equitius ordered him to carry up some of the hay for the horses, and, said he, "I will straightway come when I have dispatched the little work that remains." Meanwhile Julian was chafing at the delay, and when he saw his servant returning alone laden with hay, he cried out angrily, "Man, what does this mean? I sent you to bring the abbat, and not to fetch provender for my horse". "Sir", replied the servant, "he will come to you by-and-by". Presently Equitius appeared in hob-nail shoes and mean apparel, carrying his scythe over his shoulder. The pompous Roman cleric despised him and prepared to greet him rudely; but even he, as the abbat drew nearer, experienced the compelling influence of his holy personality, and, stammering out his message, he fell on his knees and begged the good man's prayers.

Besides the congregations of monks and nuns who lived a common life in monasteries, we read of "religious", both male and female, who lived separately, under a monastic rule and wearing the monastic dress, but either in their own houses or in some private cell. Thus in Spoleto a nobleman's daughter insisted on adopting the religious life, for which cause she was disinherited by her father, who cut her off with half of one small estate. Many noble girls joined her, however, and dedicated themselves to virginity. Gregory's own three aunts lived a monastic life in their own house in Rome; three other women resided in a house near the Church of St. Mary Major; Gregory's mother had a cell near the Basilica of St. Paul. Male hermits generally took up their residence in caves and solitary places, from which they rarely issued, save sometimes to go and worship at St. Peter's tomb in Rome. Some of these men bore themselves in a very eccentric fashion. One in Campania, named Martin, fastened himself to the wall of his cell with an iron chain, so that he could never move further than the length of the chain. When great St. Benedict heard of this he sent him a message: "If you are a servant of God, let not a chain of iron hold you, but the chain of Christ." Then Martin took off the chain, but he walked no further than he had been accustomed to when bound. Many recluses had tame pets for company. Florentius of Norcia kept a bear—he used to call him "Brother Bear"—who daily led out the hermit's sheep to pasture, and brought them back at the hour his master named. One day, some monks who were jealous of the hermit's reputation, killed the bear; whereupon Florentius cursed them, saying, "I hope in Almighty God that they may, in this life and before the eyes of all, receive the reward of their malice, who have thus killed my bear that did them no harm." The four guilty monks were stricken with a horrible disease and died; and the repentant Florentius for the rest of his life bewailed himself as their murderer.

A very strange figure is that of Isaac the Syrian. One day he suddenly appeared in Spoleto, entered the church, and asked leave of the sacristans to remain as long as he wished, without being turned out at closing time. He then commenced to pray, and continued thus all that day and all that night, and a second day and a second night, and a third day also. Then one of the sacristans, "filled with the spirit of pride", began to abuse him, calling him a hypocrite and impostor for showing himself in prayer for so great a length of time, and at last even struck him. At once the man was seized with a devil, who threw him down and forced him to cry out, "Isaac doth cast me forth." The saint, whose name was thus disclosed, expelled the spirit. Immediately the whole city was in an uproar. Men and women, nobles and peasants, rushed pell-mell to the church, trying to induce the holy man to come to their houses. Some offered him lands to build a monastery on, others offered money, others anything that they had. But Isaac refused them all, and, retiring a little distance from the city, he built a hermitage. Many others soon joined him and put themselves under his direction. To the end of his life, however, Isaac refused to accept gifts. "A monk who seeks for possessions," he was wont to say, "is not a monk." Gregory adds quaintly: "Although he was incomparably adorned with the virtue of abstinence, the contempt of worldly wealth, the spirit of prophecy and perseverance in prayer, yet he had one reprehensible trait, namely, that sometimes he would so exceed in mirth, that unless men had known him to be full of virtue, they would never have believed it."

This instance of popular enthusiasm for a holy man is by no means unique. A great deal of attention was paid to anyone who had acquired a reputation for sanctity. The rich sent him presents and asked his prayers; the poor were eager to do him little services. Laymen, and even clerics, would travel long distances for the privilege of seeing him. A humorous story is told of a saint named Constantius, who lived near Ancona, and served as sacristan in St. Stephen's Church. So great was the reputation of this holy man that people came from all parts of Italy to visit him. Among the rest came one day a simple countryman from a distant place. Arriving at St. Stephen's, he found a little tiny man of very insignificant appearance perched on some wooden steps and tending the church lamps. The bystanders assured the countryman that this was the great Constantius himself. But the foolish fellow could not for long believe that so celebrated a saint could look so insignificant. When at last he was convinced, he burst out laughing and cried, "I believed that he was a great big man, but that little creature has nothing of a man about him." Constantius, hearing his words, jumped down the steps and warmly embraced the Boor. "You are the only man," said he, " who has his eyes open, and sees me as I am."

The country-folk had a thorough belief in miraculous powers of such saintly personages. Sick persons, demoniacs, even ailing animals, were brought to them to be cured. On one occasion a holy prior met a funeral. A mother was going to bury her son; but as soon as she caught sight of the "servant of God" she seized the bridle of his horse, saying, "You shall not leave me unless you raise up my son." Another time two sisters came running to a bishop on Easter Eve, entreating him to come and restore their dead brother to life. These greater miracles the saints are represented as performing with un­willingness on account of their humility: when humility was not preserved, there was a danger that the miracle would be undone. Thus Abbat Eleutherius of Spoleto was put to sleep with a demoniac boy and healed him. But because the abbat boasted of his feat, the boy was again afflicted, and could only be healed by the united prayers of Eleutherius and the brethren.

It was generally supposed that a saint continued to exhibit miraculous powers after death. St. Equitius of Valeria, after his decease, was thought to have defended his monks from the violence of the Lombards. Bishop Fortunatus of Todi, says Gregory, "continues" to work miracles at his tomb, healing the sick and insane "as often as they ask in faith." A dead presbyter of Valeria prevented the escape of a thief who had stolen a ram belonging to his Church. A mad woman was healed in St. Benedict's cave. A stocking of St. Honoratus was instrumental in restoring a dead man to life. The coat of St. Eutychius of Norcia, was carried through the fields in time of drought, and produced rain.

It was a dangerous thing to offend a holy man even in the most trifling matters. Bishop Boniface, on the festival of St. Proeulus the Martyr, went after mass to a nobleman's house to dine. Just as he was about to say grace, he was interrupted by a strolling player with an ape, who appeared at the door and began clashing his cymbals. The bishop, in great irritation at the noise, cried out, "Ah, ah! That wretch is a dead man! that wretch is a dead man! Here have I come to dinner, and I have not opened my lips to praise God, when that fellow with his ape must needs come and clash his cymbals." Then he said to the servants, "Go and give him meat and drink for charity; yet know that he is a dead man." The bishop then said grace and ate his dinner, and the player too was entertained; but when the latter was going out a stone fell from the roof of the house and wounded him so severely that he died the next day, "according to the saying of the man of God."

The clergy of the period lived in a simple fashion, and were often extremely poor. One bishop, for example, derived his whole revenue from a small vineyard. They seem, however, to have exercised a universal charity—affording relief, not only to the poor of their own dioceses, but to all passing travelers that demanded it. Often they were men sprung from the people, and we hear of a stableman and a fuller being made bishops. Occasionally they had religious women living in their houses, and this was regarded as a great scandal. There is one contrary case of a married presbyter, who "from the time of his ordination loved his wife as a sister, but was on his guard against her as an enemy, and never allowed her on any pretext to approach him." When she came to visit him on his death-bed, he cried, "Depart from me, woman! There is still a little fire left: take away the straw!". Many clerics showed unseemly eagerness to be promoted to bishoprics. We read of a presbyter who hoarded up money to secure his election; of an archdeacon who in his impatience tried to poison the bishop. A curious tale is told of a priest of Interocrina, who was engaged in pruning his vines when he was sent for to shrive a dying penitent. He delayed in order to finish what he was about, and meanwhile the man died. So great, however, was the presbyter's grief at this mischance, that the dead man was restored to life for eight days, that he might confess and perform suitable penance!

The churches were cared for by sacristans, who looked after the cleaning, saw to the lamps, kept the worshippers in order, and opened and closed the buildings at the proper times. The sacred edifices themselves were regarded with awe by the people, who were afraid to enter them after committing any great sin. Alms were distributed in the porches, and beggars had their stations there as in the present day. The custom of burial within churches had begun, and the bishops often exacted money for the privilege. Gregory says that to be buried in a church was good for those whose sins were not great, because their friends, seeing their tombs, were reminded to pray for them; it was perilous, however, for the bad, who were only punished the more for their presumption. Martyrs appeared and ordered the bodies to be removed; foul spirits came and dragged them out by the feet; shrieks of agony were heard proceeding from the tomb, and the corpses mysteriously disappeared.

The principal service was, of course, the Mass. Many stories are told to illustrate the efficacy of the Holy Oblation. Two nuns could not rest quiet in their tomb until it was offered on their behalf; the body of a young monk of Monte Cassino was twice cast up from the grave, and only stayed in peace when the Host was laid upon the breast; thirty masses delivered the soul of Justus from purgatory; seven masses freed a spirit condemned to serve bathers in some sulphurous baths; a prisoner was miraculously released from his chains on the days on which his wife at home had offered for him; a sailor was saved from drowning on the day a bishop said mass on his behalf; Pope Agapetus healed a dumb man by placing the Host in his mouth. Altar-breads were sometimes given away by the clergy as a special favor. The Viaticum was always brought to the dying when possible. The altar was regarded as peculiarly sacred, and a little dust from it is said to have been instrumental in restoring a dead man to life.

The sign of the cross is frequently mentioned in the Dialogues. Loaves and cakes were marked with the cross. Men signed themselves when they slept, ate, or drank. A nun, wandering in the garden of her convent, plucked and ate a lettuce without first making the holy sign, and in consequence was possessed by a devil. At the exorcism which followed, the spirit cried out, "What have I done? What have I done? I was sitting upon a lettuce, and she came and ate me." The sign of the cross was several times used in working miracles. On one occasion holy water was employed.

The belief in demoniacal agency was universal. In speaking of visions, I have already quoted some instances of this belief; here I may add one other. A devil cast out of a man by Fortunatus of Todi took the form of a stranger, and walked up and down the streets of Todi, crying: "Oh, the holy bishop Fortunatus! see what he has done! He has turned a stranger out of his lodging. I seek a place to rest in, and in this city I can find none." A certain man who was sitting by his fireside with his wife and little son, hearing the cry, went out and asked the stranger in. But while they were talking, the spirit suddenly attacked the child, and flung him into the fire before the eyes of his father. "Then the wretched, bereaved man knew whom he had entertained and whom the bishop had expelled from his lodging."

This Fortunatus, we are told, "had a most singular grace in putting spirits to flight, so that sometimes he would cast out legions of devils from possessed bodies." The following instance is peculiar. A certain Tuscan lady who had violated an ecclesiastical rule was seized in church by an evil spirit. The priest attempted to cast it out by covering the lady with the altar-cloth; but because he presumed beyond his strength, a devil entered into him also. Then the lady was taken by her relatives to certain wizards, who plunged her into a river, reciting at the same time magical incantations. The result was that though the first demon was driven out, a whole legion entered in; "and from that time forward the woman began to be agitated with as many emotions and to shriek out with as many voices as there were devils in her body." At last she was brought to Fortunatus, who prayed over her for many days and nights, and in the end, with much difficulty, effected a cure.

In the Dialogues we read of some curious visions of heaven and hell. The vision of the soldier, which has been referred to in an earlier chapter, is the most elaborate and remarkable. Volcanoes were regarded as entrances into hell, and Gregory says the mouths of the craters were growing wider, to accommodate the increased number of persons that pass through them as the world draws near its end. A dying man sent a message to a friend, who was also dying, to say that the ship was ready to take them to Sicily; and this was interpreted to mean that they were going to hell through the volcanoes in that island. Hell itself was believed to be a furnace of material fire. The corpse of a dyer buried in the Church of St. Januarius near the Laurentian Gate in Rome, was heard shrieking in his tomb, "I burn! I burn!". Flames broke out of the grave of a wicked curialis of Valeria, consuming both the body and the sepulchre! A dying man saw in a vision a bad presbyter named Tiburtius burning on a funeral pile. Of purgatorial punishment we get two remarkable instances, where the spirits of dead persons were compelled to remain in sulphur baths and to serve as attendants on the living bathers.

I will close this account of the Dialogues with two representative anecdotes, one of a wizard and the other of a haunted house. About the year 504 a certain Basilius was accused of practicing magical arts in Rome, and was thrown into prison. Taking advantage, however, of the insanity of his gaoler, he escaped and fled into Valeria, disguised as a monk. Here he managed to win the good graces of the Bishop of San Vittorino, who recommended him to the famous Abbat Equitius. The story goes that, so soon as Equitius set eyes on the man, he recognized him to be "a devil", but as he was unable to convince the bishop, he received him into his monastery. Shortly afterwards the abbat set off on one of his preaching tours, and Basilius took advantage of his absence to bewitch a beautiful nun in a neighboring convent, who fell into a fever and kept crying out, "I shall die at once unless Basilius the monk come to me and heal me by his skill in physic". But the elder monks would not permit Basilius to approach the convent without the permission of the abbat. They sent, however, a message to Equitius, to ask what they should do. So soon as Equitius heard the story he exclaimed, "Did not I say that Basilius was a devil and no monk? Go and drive him from the monastery." This was accordingly done, and the nun at once recovered. After his expulsion, Basilius was wont to declare that he had often by his magic suspended the abbat’s cell in the air, but he had never been able to harm any of the monks. In the end Basilius was arrested, and "in an outbreak of Christian zeal" was burned alive in Rome.

The second story is singular. When Datius of Milan was on his way to Constantinople, in the time of Justinian, he broke his journey at Corinth, where he endeavored to hire a house large enough for himself and his company. After seeking in vain for a long time, he at length discovered a good-sized mansion which seemed to suit his requirements. He was told by the people of the place, however, that the house was haunted by the devil, and had remained empty in consequence for several years. But Datius said: "We ought all the more to lodge in this house, if the wicked spirit has taken possession of it and driven men away". The place was accordingly prepared, and the bishop took up his quarters. When evening came he went to bed and fell asleep; but about midnight he was aroused by a hideous din, which resembled the roaring of lions, the bleating of sheep, the braying of asses, the hissing of serpents, the grunting of hogs, and the screaming of rats, all combining in terrific uproar. Then Datius in great rage got up and addressed the devil: "Thou art rightly served, wretch Thou art he who said: I will sit in the sides of the north; I will be like the Most High; and now, through thy pride, see how thou art made like hogs and rats. Thou unworthily didst desire to imitate God, and now behold, according to thy deserts, thou dost imitate brutes." At these words the devil was so ashamed that he took himself off and never returned; and the haunted house was soon afterwards taken by some good Christians, who never suffered any further inconvenience.

Such are the stories vouched for by the highest ecclesiastical authority and the keenest intellect of the age. Let me, in conclusion, once more call attention to the strange combination of shrewdness and superstition which characterized the mind of Gregory. It is certainly astonishing that the clear-headed man who managed the Papal estates and governed the Church with such admirable skill, should have contributed to the propagation of these wild tales of demons and wizards and haunted houses, of souls made visible, of rivers obedient to written orders, of corpses that scream and walk. And yet such was the fact. The landlord of the Papal Patrimonies and the author of the Dialogues are one and the same person. And in him we have, perhaps, the first genuine Italian example of the mediaeval intellect.

 

 

BOOK II.GREGORY'S PONTIFICATE.

CHAPTER IV.

GREGORY PATRIARCH OF THE WEST.