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        READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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          THELIFE AND TIMES OF ST. BONIFACEBYJAMES M. WILLIAMSON
 
 680 c. Birth of
              Boniface.
               686. Kedwall succeeds Kentwin in
              Wessex.
               688. Ina succeeds Kedwall in Wessex.
               705. Old See of
              Dorchester divided into Winchester and Sherburne, having been at Winchester
              alone (moved from Dorchester) since 680.
               715. Charles
              Martel succeeds Pepin of Heristal.
               716. Boniface sets
              out for Friesland, but soon returns. Charles Martel defeats Radbod and Chilperic at Ambleve.
               718. Boniface
              leaves Nutscelle for Rome.
               719. Boniface
              leaves Rome via Lombardy and Bavaria for Thuringia. Death of Radbod of Frisia. Boniface returns
              to Frisia.
               723. Boniface's
              second visit to Rome, where he is consecrated Bishop. Boniface returns to
              Germany.
               731. Death of Pope
              Gregory II; accession of Gregory III. 731(?2). Carl Martel defeats the Saracens
              at Tours.
               731. Gregory III
              sends Boniface the pallium of Archbishop.
               738. Boniface's
              third visit to Rome. Boniface returns to Germany.
               739. Luitprand,
              threatening Rome, is stayed by Gregory Ill's appeal to Charles Martel.
               741. Deaths of Leo
              III, Gregory III, and Charles Martel.
               742. Pepin and Carloman summon a State Council (?) at Salz.
               743. Synod of
              Lessines.
               744. Boniface
              appointed to See of Cologne. Founds by Sturm the Abbey of Fulda.
               745. Boniface
              appointed to See of Mainz, which is raised to an Archbishopric.
               746. Boniface
              founds Bishoprics of Wurtzburg, Franconia, Erfurt,
              &c. Death of Bishop Daniel of Winchester.
               747. Abdication of Carloman. Pepin rules alone.
               75oDeposition of
              Childeric, the last of the Merovingians.
               750-1. State
              Assembly at Soissons. Pepin chosen King and crowned by Boniface.
               752. Pope Zachary
              dies.
               753. Pope Stephen
              visits Pepin regarding Luitprand's threats against
              Rome.
               754. Pepin
              recrowned by Pope Stephen.
               755. State Council
              at Braine. Lullus succeeds Boniface at Mainz.
              Boniface revisits Frisia, and is slain at Dorkhum.
                
                   I
               About the year 680
              there was born within a few miles of Exeter, at a place generally believed to
              have been Crediton, a man who lived to become a striking and a memorable figure
              in European history. His parents, who were Anglo-Saxons of Wessex, called their
              son Winfrith. When he was well on in manhood Winfrith changed that name to the
              Latin one of Boniface, which he bore for the rest of his long life. His memory
              has been reverently passed down through the succeeding ages of Christendom as
              St. Boniface of Mainz, the Great Apostle of Germany.
               Twelve long
              centuries throw their obscuring veil between us and the far distant year 680.
              The time is remote, facts that are trustworthy and fit to rest upon are few,
              and such records as are available are crusted over with legend. But even though
              these real difficulties were less than they are, it is natural that the mind
              should at first toss about rather helplessly when it is suddenly asked to
              realize, in due relation to its historical connexions,
              an event that happened so long ago. An endeavour is
              at once made to find some anchorage by trying to recall kindred events which
              took place at or near the period mentioned.
               Now in regard to
              680 several helpful facts of the sort rapidly present themselves; and as the
              date refers to the birth of a great churchman, a choice of such aids can be
              made from clerical careers. There is the pious St. Cuthbert, for instance, with
              seven important years still before him, but as yet spending his days austerely
              in his lonely cell on Lindisfarne. Then a thought is given to St. Chad of
              Lichfield, lying in his newly-made grave at Lestingay,
              a victim, only seven years before, to the great pestilence. A moment more and
              there stands before the mind the travelled and practical Benedict Biscop, just beginning from his Wearmouth Monastery to teach his fellow countrymen how to build stone churches instead of
              wooden ones; while, every bit as great a work as rearing buildings of stone, he
              was in that year 680 engaged in bringing up a little boy of seven, the future
              Venerable Bede of Jarrow. Four well-known names,
              these; and yet there will be no sense of overweight if room is made for two
              others. There was the worthy Aldhelm of Malmesbury,
              bent on study, but happiest as he worked out his service of song. And there was
              that energetic and restless man, Wilfrid of York, chafing this self- ame year in his northern prison under King Egfrid's vindictive hand.
               But full of
              interests as this little circle could be, the range must be widened. A general
              outline of the history of the day must be obtained, for it is desirable, in
              relation to Winfrith's birth, to picture before the
              mind something of the state of the southern part of this country towards the
              end of the seventh century. A little study will show how full the times were of
              activity, and how likely one of Winfrith's natural
              temperament was to be drawn to an earnestness and a decision of character by
              special circumstances that existed in the locality of his birth and early
              training. 
               All of us know
              that the English nation has drawn neither its origin nor its strength from a
              single parentage, but that it is indebted to repeated blendings with some of the most stalwart races of the European Continent. The nation has,
              as it were, gone through successive stages of development, and the initial
              steps of every stage produced, for a time, a convulsion throughout the country.
              About the year 680 England was passing through one of these mighty experiences.
              A new race was amalgamating with an old, while politically, socially, and
              religiously, freshly planted seeds of coming greatness and enlightenment were
              actively germinating.
               Looking at the
              country at this time, it is seen that, although the land was still divided out
              into several small kingdoms, the Anglo-Saxons had entered into possession of
              the larger part of it. They had, indeed, rooted themselves in the whole of it
              with the exception of West Wales (that is to say, Cornwall with some portion of
              Devon), of North Wales (what we now call Wales), and of the northern kingdom of
              Strathclyde districts which had as yet been left in the hands of the
              dispossessed Britons when they crowded into them for refuge from the conquering
              sword of the invaders.
               Now, of the
              various principalities into which Anglo-Saxon England was broken up, there was
              one which had already begun to aspire towards that leading position among the
              rest which Egbert was destined, about a century later, to make supreme. This
              kingdom was Wessex. Founded in 519 by Cerdic, it was
              the fortune of Wessex to come under the government of some rather remarkable
              princes. For present purposes it is only necessary to take note of those whose
              reigns cover the period of Winfrith's time, and the
              following table brings their five names conveniently before the eye :
               Kings of Wessex
              from 680 to 755.
               Kentwin (Centwin) successor
              to Eskwin...... 676-686
               Kedwall (Ceadwalla) ....
              686-688
               Ina ....... 688-725
               Edelard ...... 725-741
               Cuthred ...... 741-755
               It was Kentwin who was on the Wessex throne when Winfrith was
              born. He is said to have been a restless man, a warrior, and his people had
              little peace under him. They did not fare much better under Kedwall,
              his successor, who was also a man of war. In his youth he had been expelled
              from Wessex, but his ambitious desires were far from being quenched as he
              wandered in exile among the forests of Sussex. There he met another exile in
              the person of Wilfrid of York, who had been set free from captivity in the
              North but driven into banishment. Although the world would gladly have
              forgotten these men, they by no means forgot the world. In their enforced
              seclusion the two foregathered, and, pagan and half-barbarian though Kedwall was, Wilfrid of York provided him with such
              substantial aid that he was able to seize upon the Kingdom of Wessex. Safely
              placed, his sword was turned upon the Jutes, whose territory lay in Kent and
              the Isle of Wight; and the slaughter he committed is set down as the chief event
              of his short reign. Kedwall only ruled two years.
              After securing the sovereignty of Wessex he sent for Wilfrid of York, and, in
              spite of all his savagery, his heart made some echo to the religious teaching
              that was then making its way in his kingdom. Increasing sympathy with the
              spreading Christianity led him shortly afterwards to make gifts of land to St.
              Peter's Minster at Medeshamstede. His religious fervour grew stronger, and at last culminated in 688, when
              he was thirty years old, in his abdicating the throne and setting out for Rome
              under Aldhelm's care. At Rome Pope Sergius received him, baptizing him and renaming him Peter.
               Ina followed Kedwall on the Wessex throne, and was one of the best
              princes who ever reigned in this country. He was a man of high renown as a
              conqueror and a prudent and wise king, but especially noted as a lawgiver.
               The kings who
              followed Ina need not particularly concern us, for Winfrith had finally left
              England before Ina's reign ended. But of the princes who ruled Wessex from the
              time of Winfrith's birth until in mature manhood he
              left his native land, of Kentwin, Kedwall,
              and Ina it may be said that, politically, they were all men in earnest, men
              whose chief endeavour was to enlarge the size and
              influence as well as to improve the internal condition of their kingdom. During
              their respective reigns they seem to have oscillated between heathenism and
              Christianity, between something not far from barbarism and something
              approaching to civilization. Possibly much depended upon the demands of the
              occasion. It seems clear, however, that after Wessex had become Christian for a
              few years the Saxons behaved with far less ferocity to their enemies,
              especially to the British; and there can be no doubt that the experiences of
              the British along the Damnonian borders of Wessex,
              during the latter part of the seventh century, were immensely less severe than
              the attacks upon them by Cerdic and his immediate
              successors. At the same time, whatever the Christianity of Kentwin, Kedwall, and Ina, it neither prevented them paying
              off old scores upon their neighbours, nor from absorbing, by force of arms, for
              conquest only, and at every opportunity, some portion of their neighbours’ land. And, in extending their borders, they by
              no means overlooked those which, for the time, separated Wessex from West
              Wales. The British territory there steadily diminished before an ever-advancing
              Saxon boundary-line. For reasons that will be discussed later on it seems to be
              impossible now to define the course of this boundary-line in the vicinity of
              Crediton about the year 680. But enough is known to make it certain that
              Crediton must have stood very near the border. It is therefore easy to imagine
              how, in spite of every effort to blend and intermix the two populations and to
              mitigate severity, there would be daily seen and felt in the little village all
              the chafing, the soreness, and jealous heartburnings which only centuries can remove, from the point of contact between the new race
              and the old, the victor and the vanquished. A child of Wessex born into such a
              home would inhale the pride of patriotism with his native air, and, in his
              boyhood, he would be stamped for life with an undying loyalty to his
              Anglo-Saxon ancestry.
               As compared with
              the state it was in a hundred years before, the country was not only advancing
              towards better times politically, but it was also making great strides towards
              social improvement. This was perhaps not so evident in the attitude of kingdom
              towards kingdom as it was in the relations between individuals and classes.
              Towards the original inhabitants the policy of the Saxons was changing from one
              of slavery or extermination into one of conciliation. It gradually became
              possible for British families to dwell within the borders of the more powerful
              Saxons, 'might' no doubt exacting some return as a 'right' Honest efforts too
              were made, particularly during King Ina's time, to unite and fuse the two
              populations by marriage and by equal laws and privileges. At the same time the
              condition of the poor and of the churls, or villeins, was improving, while the
              tyranny and oppression of their masters were checked by legal enactments. The
              precepts of religion had of course much to do with this forward step, as we
              know they have had to do later in our national history with not less important
              progress in the establishing of good government and the cause of freedom. These
              Wessex princes were shrewd enough to accept the aid of Christianity, as will
              presently be seen, in civilizing their subjects. Prompted by their clergy they
              framed laws to make the observance of the Sabbath, as a day of rest from toil,
              obligatory. The practice of charity also became compulsory, and it was provided
              that one-tenth of the land's produce should be handed over for the maintenance of
              the clergy and of the destitute. In this way the firm foundations of social
              stability and progress were being laid : protection and conciliatory treatment
              of the conquered; one day's rest in seven for the labouring bulk of the population; the feeding of the poor and destitute ; and the support
              of those whose lives were spent in spreading religion, morality, and education.
               It has been said
              that social advance was hardly so evident in the relations of the small
              kingdoms to each other, for, in the struggle for supremacy, the various
              principalities continued to play their own self-interested parts without much
              regard to neighbourly considerations. But there was
              something promising in the idea that all might ultimately be absorbed into one.
              Such a thought may have taken its rise more in a popular aspiration than in a
              passion for conquest in the hearts of the kings themselves. Indeed some inward
              longings after the blessings and quiet strength of a single and compact
              nationality must have been foreshadowed in the minds of the people, for they
              were just then beginning to utter for the first time in history the name
              England. It would indeed be an in- spiring thought if it could be believed that
              the first breathings of that mighty name were born of the wish that a time
              would come when those who were brethren would at last dwell together in unity.
               It will be
              desirable now, in order to complete the outline, to leave the political and
              social side of the picture and to try to obtain some idea of the religious
              condition of Wessex when Winfrith was born ; and, dealing with an
              ecclesiastical career, it may be excusable to go a little more fully over this
              part of the ground.
               Wessex embraced
              Christianity in 634, and owed its conversion to the work of continental and of
              Celtic missionaries. But long before Jutes or Angles ever set foot in this
              country, at quite an early date, the Britons were Christians. The Christian
              Church in South Britain seems to have been founded by missionaries from the
              Church in Gaul, who made their way into the country along the track of the
              Roman legions. Some believe the legend of Joseph of Arimathea and Glastonbury;
              others feel doubts whether there was any Christianity at all in Britain so far
              back as the first century. Trustworthy information is at best but scanty. If
              not in the first century, there must have been a Christian community of some vigour and enterprise in Britain soon afterwards, for there
              can be no doubt it was from South Britain that were projected those missionary
              efforts which planted the religion in North Britain, and there is evidence to
              make it more than probable there was Christianity in North Britain in the
              second century. Following the course of years, history gives the year 303 as
              the date of the martyrdom of St. Alban at Verulam, and, about the same time,
              Julius and Aaron are known to have suffered at Lincoln signs that the religion
              was widely diffused. The fact that the bishops of London, York, and Lincoln
              attended the Council of Aries in 314 goes to indicate a Church rising in
              organization and dignity. Its progress need not be pursued further at this
              moment. It is sufficient to indicate this as the British Church, sometimes
              called the Church of the Welsh the Christian Church existing in this country
              when the Anglo-Saxons arrived.
               Pass now to the
              Church in North Britain, founded, as has been said, by missionaries from South
              Britain, very probably as early as the second century. It is most difficult to
              recover names from the dim shades of the history of those times, but among
              those whose names do remain as men of activity in the North British Church,
              none of the earliest ranks higher than St. Ninian,
              who was born in 360. During his day his Church sent missionaries into the north
              of Ireland, the Irish Dalriada, the land of the Scots. It is not only known
              that this offshoot was visited by Palladius in 430,
              but that it was inspired with great life and energy by St. Patrick who spent
              his life there, and died there in 493. So mightily grew and prospered this
              branch of the North British Church that Central Europe received missionaries
              from it. It did more than that : it revived its mother Church by sending
              Columba to Iona, whence he converted the Scots in the Scottish Dalriada and the
              Northern Picts. This then constituted the Church of North Britain, often spoken
              of as the Celtic Church or the Church of the Scots.
               Now it is clear
              that both the Church of the British or Welsh, and the Celtic Church or Church
              of the Scots, were descended from the Gallican Church, and it was upon the
              latter as a model that they formed their worship. In all but some matters that
              were made a great deal of then, but would now be reckoned as far from material,
              such as the date of Easter and the shape of the tonsure, the form of worship
              was practically the same as that followed by the churches elsewhere in Europe,
              that is to say in Christendom.
               With the arrival
              of the Anglo-Saxons a change came over the scene in South Britain. When they
              answered the appeal of the British, after the departure of the Romans, and came
              in 429 to help in driving off the Picts and Scots, they set out from a pagan
              home, and they brought their paganism across the seas with them. When, as
              events took their course between 449 and 455, the Anglo-Saxons turned against
              the British and drove them westward, they were steeped as deeply in heathenism
              as ever; and after they at last succeeded in hunting the Britons into Wales and
              West Wales, and in settling themselves firmly down, paganism reigned supreme in
              that portion of the land. Savagery inflicted extermination or slavery on the
              vanquished, those who saved their lives lost their religion with their liberty,
              and in that portion of the land Christianity was swallowed up in heathenism.
               'Heaven's high
              will
               Permits a second
              and a darker shade
               Of pagan night.'
               Religion in this
              country thus offered a notable picture in the fifth and sixth centuries : the
              Britons, in their retreats on the west, practising the rites of the Christian faith, while their Anglo-Saxon successors elsewhere
              in the country wallowed in idolatry and darkness. It does not appear that the
              fact either disturbed or stimulated the consciences of the Britons. An
              exception may perhaps be allowed in regard to the oft-quoted Gildas, himself the son of a British lord and reared in a
              Glamorganshire monastery. He seems to have written an invective against the
              British clergy for their sloth in never vouchsafing their Saxon neighbours the
              means of conversion. Yet the British Church had not been deficient in
              missionary spirit, as can be seen by what it did for North Britain. It has been
              charitably asked what means there was of converting in the midst of so much
              hostility, a question it is certainly not easy now to determine. Better times
              were, however, at hand. At last, after the Anglo-Saxons in the country had lain
              for 150 years in their paganism, the beams of the Sun of Righteousness were to
              visit even them. Denied a passage through the Britons on the west, the light
              touched the country on the east, on its Kentish shore, coming, as we all know,
              straight from Rome through Pope Gregory the Great, in the person of St.
              Augustine, in 597. Augustine, welcomed and helped by King Ethelbert and his
              wife Bertha, did his best to plant what he believed to be the religion of the
              Cross; and after fourteen years' labour he was
              succeeded by others who worked, more or less well, with the same object. Here,
              then, is the direct introduction of Christianity into this country from Rome,
              the Church of Rome.
               There were now at
              work in the country three religious centres, the
              Church of the Welsh, the Church of the Scots, and the Church of the Romans. It
              was in the nature of things that an approach should before long take place
              between at least two of these centres, the first and
              the third, and, as a fact, such an approach was made by Augustine. Among the
              British or Welsh he found a Church that was still one of some proportions.
              Shrunken and contracted as it was it owned seven bishoprics and an archbishop.
              But for Augustine's object it was unapproachable. Towards himself it displayed
              a proud disdain, and towards the Anglo-Saxons it still nursed its old
              animosities. Dinooth was its spokesman. He was abbot
              of a noble church at Bangor, and gave Augustine for his answer that the British
              Church owed no subjection to him, nor would they join him in preaching the
              Gospel to their enemies, reckoning their faith and religion as nothing, and
              being no more willing to communicate with the Angles than with dogs. It is hard
              to believe that this speech came from a teacher of the precepts of the Man of Nazareth.
              But the most religious of us, whether in the pulpit or on his knees, has still
              in him a huge element of human frailty, and injuries have a way of rankling
              even in an abbot's breast. Perhaps, too, tact and the lowly spirit were not
              very outwardly visible in Augustine at the interview. The result was a failure,
              and he returned to carry on his work without native aid.
               The success of the
              Romish Church after sixty years' labour in Britain
              was not satisfactory to them. They never penetrated Wessex, Sussex, or Mercia;
              they failed to establish themselves in Essex, East Anglia, and in Northumbria;
              and, after working for forty years, all that remained to them was Kent. Now the
              British Church had, as has been said, ceased to conceive any missionary
              longings. But the Church of the Scots had not. Strengthened by the
              establishment of Columba in Iona, it roused itself to do what the British
              Church would not and what the Romish Church could not. Invited by King Oswald,
              Iona sent Aidan to found in Lindisfarne a see from which a great part of the
              country eventually derived its salvation.
               But here we must
              now limit down our scope. Wessex, it has been already said, received
              Christianity in 634. Let us understand how this came about. For the first
              preaching of the Gospel it was indebted to Birinus,
              who was sent by Pope Honorius. He had no connexion with the older Augustinian mission in Kent, nor did he seek any. Some think
              this shows that Pope Honorius disapproved of the Kentish mission wasting its
              forces and rousing opposition by vain disputes with the Church of the Scots,
              and that he wished to project an entirely new effort. At any rate, it often
              brings better success to make a fresh start, especially if one uses a
              well-chosen and judicious man, adapted to the object in view.
               Birinus found Wessex under the government of two
              brothers named Cuichelm and Cynegils.
              About this time Oswald of Northumbria, who was last mentioned as having brought
              from Iona into his kingdom Aidan of the Church of the Scots, went south into
              Wessex to marry the daughter of Cynegils. When he
              arrived there, he found Birinus doing his best; and,
              to Oswald's everlasting honour, as well as to the
              great credit of the sincerity of his Celtic Church training, he not only gave Birinus his countenance, but his cordial help, persuading Cynegils to be baptized, and actually standing godfather to
              his own father-in-law. Thus consecrated in the royal family circle, the work
              thence- forward never stopped. To Birinus there
              succeeded a monk trained in the Church of the Scots, and as there soon spread
              through Wessex an outcry for native preachers to speak to the people in their
              own tongue, a wise provision was made for this in the person of Vini and others. And so did events fortunately develop that
              in 655 we have the comfortable sight of the fifth successor to St. Augustine at
              Canterbury, Frithona, otherwise called Deusdedit kindly disposed, no doubt by being himself a West
              Saxon showing something of the liberality of a true Christian spirit by
              entering into intercourse with the Celtic bishops of his native kingdom.
               As there is
              nothing of importance to relate from this period until Wilfrid of York came on
              the scene in 686, the situation that is presented to the eye at the time of Winfrith's birth is easily defined. There was the Church of
              the British or Welsh holding itself aloof, while in a Christianized Wessex
              there were the Celtic or Scottish and the Romish missions, still separate, but
              approaching one another not unamiably. Even with the
              British Church a modus vivendi had become possible, at least
              within the conquered area, and on the borderlands where contact took place. But
              with all this the two sides debated the old points of difference with that
              tenacity which inspires religious disputes ; and where the tides of opinion and
              practice actually met, it was more apt to be in waves of opposition than in
              smooth and combining streams of confluence. It is not hard to imagine what
              complexion would be given to the mind of an Anglo-Saxon youth who was being
              carefully and seriously trained within earshot of such constant discussions,
              and how essential he would come to consider the accomplishment, if at all
              possible, of a unity that would bring quietness, discipline, and strength.
               
               II
               In setting to work
              at this point to take up the biographical thread, there arises the difficulty,
              none the less real because anticipated, of knowing what is reliable history and
              what is legend. About one thing no one has any doubt. Winfrith was born in the Damnonian corner of the kingdom of Wessex in or about the
              year 680. It is usual to find historians speaking of his parents as of noble or
              distinguished family, and this is the generally accepted account. There is
              another and irreconcilable story that he was the son of a wheelwright. It is
              worthwhile mentioning this story because it goes on to relate that in his
              archiepiscopal days Boniface was so far from being ashamed of his origin that
              he assumed a pair of wheels as his armorial bearings. On the coat-of-arms of
              the city of Mayence, the seat of his archbishopric,
              there is still to be found a pair of wheels, and the presence of this device is
              accounted for in the way just mentioned. But it must not be forgotten that in
              the seventh century Anglo-Saxon tradesmen occupied a very inferior position, and
              such men as smiths and carpenters, and no doubt also wheel-wrights, were mostly
              attached in a servile position to the establishments of the wealthy. It is very
              unlikely, therefore, that if his parents were not in a higher station of life, Winfrith's early years could have been spent among the
              educational and religious influences that are known to have surrounded them.
               The actual
              birthplace of Winfrith is believed to have been the ancient little town of
              Crediton, which lies seven miles to the north-west of Exeter. It is true that
              in the oldest biography of Boniface, written not long after his death by
              Willibald, the name of Crediton is not given. But it is mentioned in another
              biography, the work of Othlone in the eleventh
              century, and later authors have followed him in his statement. In our rather
              ruthless age it is the custom to throw a searching light upon everything, and
              by applying the process to this little fact about Crediton, it has proved
              possible to cast a shadow of doubt. This doubt has been raised by no less an
              authority than Freeman. It is known that the western Wessex boundary did not
              reach Taunton till 710, and only extended to Exeter at some time between 688
              and 710. Seeing this, Freeman acknowledges a difficulty in understanding how an
              Anglo-Saxon family happened to be living so far within what was presumably
              British territory as Crediton. Rather than believe the Wessex borders at that
              time overlapped Cre- diton, he would abandon the idea
              that Winfrith was born there. The matter was debated from the opposite side by
              Richard John King, a keen observer and possessed of great local knowledge,
              himself now lying in Crediton churchyard. But as the Danes burnt most of the
              records of the time, it will perhaps never be possible now to indicate precisely
              where the boundary ran about the year 680. Allowance must also be made for the
              fact that conciliatory methods having been adopted about this period,
              Anglo-Saxon families did here and there trust themselves over the borders and
              lived among their British neighbours on the other side. On this ground, if not
              on the other, even critical minds are willing to accept it as a fact that
              Winfrith was born at Crediton.
               A visit to
              Crediton itself reveals nothing in regard to it, and is apt to cause
              disappointment. It is a quiet, sleepy town, in a fertile and well-wooded
              country. Green undulating hills ascend around it, and the houses lie sweltering
              in the hollow. Half way up the long straggling street stands the handsome
              church, an old representative of a distinguished past. But it is in vain to
              look anywhere for a link with St. Boniface. There is a well, partly arched
              over, and evidently very old. Some writers speak of it as St. Winfrith's Well, but it is not so recognized by those who
              live near it, and who name it to the traveller as Libbot's Well, or the Abbot's Well. In the church, in the
              town, there is no memorial, no sign : the connexion with Boniface, known to some of the inhabitants, stirs no enthusiasm, and is at
              best a piece of pale and vague sentiment.
               Winfrith was not
              the only child of the family; the home had at least another, a little sister
              named Winna. It seems to have been, for the times, a home of some refinement
              and education, and in the habit of receiving visits from those who came into
              the neighbourhood to preach religion to the people.
              We can imagine the house, a wooden structure, without chimneys, and without
              glass windows, for glass was not known to the Anglo-Saxons in the seventh
              century. In the midst of the dirt and smoke inseparable from these deficiencies,
              curtains and hangings were plentiful, and the benches and seats, which
              surrounded the wooden tables, had their coverings. Little Winfrith attracted
              the attention of the priests and clerics who visited the parental dwelling by
              the interest he took in sacred things, and by the questions he asked, even at
              the early age of four or five. There were, in consequence, plenty who urged the
              parents to give to the Church a child of such early promise. To this the father
              strenuously objected, and it is said he would hear nothing of it until
              prostration on a bed of sickness brought him to another state of mind, and he
              yielded. The home life of Winfrith only lasted till he was seven years old,
              till what the Anglo-Saxons termed the period of infancy ended and that of
              childhood began. At the age of seven, then, he was handed over to Abbot Wolfhard (Uulfhardo) and given to
              the Church ; and we hear no more of parents or parental influences. As it was,
              the power of parents over their children was just beginning to be somewhat
              curtailed by the clergy, and a boy little more than twice the age of seven
              (sixteen) might, without parental approval, enter himself as a monk.
               Wolfhard, to whom Winfrith was committed by his parents,
              was abbot of a monastery at Exeter, known then as Adestancastre , Adescancastre, Ad Exam Castrum, and later as Excester; and to a school attached to this monastery he
              conveyed his youthful charge. It has been asserted that this monastery was a
              British (Celtic) one, and there seem sufficient reasons for believing that this
              at least was so at the time Winfrith was placed there. There is a belief that a
              monastery existed at Exeter two centuries before Winfrith went there, and it,
              of course, must have been British. Then we know that Exeter was not incorporated
              into Wessex till Ina's reign; and though it was acquired before 710, it is
              hardly likely that it was gained prior to 694, because Ina, who began to reign
              in 688, was occupied at first with a civil war, and afterwards with an attack
              upon Kent, which he did not reduce till 694. Even when Exeter was said to have
              been taken, it remained in reality a ' double city V that is to say, its
              southern half was British and its northern was English. And while it is
              admitted that Aldhelm, as Abbot of Malmesbury, did
              his best to soften the religious relations between the British and the English,
              trying hard to persuade the former to accept the Romish teachings held by the
              latter, it is clear that his work in that direction must have been mainly
              attempted after Ina's incorporation of the city and his own appointment to the
              newly-created bishopric of Sherburne had given him special influence upon
              Exeter establishments. This was after Winfrith had been placed at the
              conventual school there, and therefore it is probable that, although the
              monastery and its school may have been undergoing modifications, they were
              still essentially Celtic.
               In this ancient
              city of Exeter, which had already been the city of the Briton, the Roman, and
              the Saxon, Winfrith spent the earlier part of his youth attending the monastic
              school. In Exeter an old tradition is repeated that during his stay Winfrith
              lived in a narrow street called St. Pancras Lane. It would be of much more
              interest if we could discover where the monastery itself was situated. A
              supposition has been offered that it occupied the site of the existing
              cathedral. This may be at least admitted as possible, for there is good
              authority for believing that on, or close to, the site of the present
              cathedral, which is known to be the direct local descendant of a conventual
              church founded in 1019, Athelstane established a
              monastery in 932. It is far from improbable that Athelstane took for his purpose the piece of ground that had been devoted to the same
              object three or four centuries before, the monastery spoken of as at Adescancastre.
               Winfrith's father followed the usual custom of the day
              when he sent his son to the monastery, for such institutions were the only centres from which the social, industrial, and educational
              life of the inhabitants were improved, and where those objects were inculcated
              by all the force of teaching combined with practical example. Just at that time
              monasteries were not disciplined by a strict adherence to the Benedictine
              rules, as came to be the case a very few years afterwards ; still less did they
              resemble those places of careless and degenerate life which turned a whole
              country against them later on in the centuries. The monks to whom Winfrith was
              sent lived together as brethren, and they toiled for their daily bread. Their
              duties were by no means confined to religious observances, but included severe
              manual labour. The political and religious movements
              of those active times allowed no idlers, no fossilizing by reason of
              insincerity.
               Under such
              circumstances, then, Winfrith’s period of CNIHTHADE,
              as the Anglo-Saxons called it, passed in the acquisition of learning, in the
              stimulation of whatever there was in him of piety, without the least of
              anything to damp his zeal. His progress was more than satisfactory to his
              teachers, while they were struck with the development of the sincere and pious
              elements of his character. The distinction he earned in these respects marked
              him out as one deserving of special care, and led to his being transferred,
              after a few years, to the abbey of Nhutscelle, near
              Southampton, and placed in the charge there of Abbot Winberct.
              There he was to remain and complete his studies till the time arrived for his
              ordination to the priesthood.
               It is recorded
              that in the course of his education much of Winfrith’s time was bestowed upon the study of the Bible, in which he became very
              proficient, and he showed skill in writing verse, but especially distinguished
              himself in rhetoric. Abbot Winberct seems to have had
              that great gift of the true teacher of discovering a pupil's natural talents,
              and cultivating them to every advantage.
               The abbey of Nhutscelle, Nutscelle, or Nutcell was in the diocese of Winchester. In the year 639,
              five years after the conversion of Wessex, a bishopric was erected at Dorchester,
              in Oxfordshire. For some reason, perhaps because
              Dorchester proved too far out of the way as the kingdom spread westwards, the
              bishopric was moved about 680 to Winchester, but the diocese remained precisely
              the same. It was presently found to be too extensive, and, when Bishop Hedda
              died in 705 the opportunity was taken to divide it. A second bishopric was
              created by raising the monastery of Sherburne into a cathedral. To it were
              assigned Wilts., Berks.,
              Somerset, Dorset, Devonshire, and as much of Cornwall as the Saxons had
              conquered; and Aldhelm unwillingly relinquished the
              abbacy of Malmesbury, which he had held for thirty years, to rule over it. To
              the bishopric of Winchester there was left Surrey, Sussex, Hampshire, and the
              Isle of Wight; and this see was placed under an excellent man named Bishop
              Daniel.
               The social
              improvement that was going on in Wessex at the beginning of the eighth century
              greatly forwarded the progress of church government. It is natural to suppose
              that there would flow from it a much closer supervision of clerical and
              monastic life; and that, whatever may have been the want of cohesion and of
              strictness of control which Bede described as existing in many parts of the
              country as a legacy from more primitive arrangements, the internal discipline
              of most conventual establishments would begin to receive more careful
              attention. Nutscelle being within twenty miles of
              Winchester, the change in the episcopal affairs would be a source of great
              interest to the monks there; and as the narrowed compass of the see enabled the
              bishop's work to be more efficient, no doubt their abbey would fall in for some
              of his earliest and closest supervision.
               The great Order
              under which the monasteries of England were established was the Benedictine, and
              to this Nutscelle was no exception. The Order,
              founded by St. Benedict in Italy about 520, was introduced into this country by
              St. Augustine, and, when fully obeyed, was under a very strict rule. The
              observance of what was enjoined by it imposed no slight yoke upon those who
              submitted themselves to it. It aimed at activity in arts and letters, and
              simplicity in devotion. Labour and prayer, silence
              and solitude, obedience and humility, were its principles. What between the
              hours for labour and study, for spiritual functions
              and church observances, and for the attainment of the virtues, especially the
              virtue of humility, the days of the brethren must have been crowded with
              employment. Their nights were not undisturbed. Every monk slept in his clothes,
              upon a mat, in his own cell, and rose two hours after midnight to spend the
              time between matins and daybreak in meditation. England is indebted deeply to
              men attached to this Order for a vast extent of her progress in civilization
              and government, not to speak of religion; and she should never be ashamed to
              acknowledge her debt, for all creeds and Christian countries reverence the name
              of St. Benedict.
               Winfrith was not
              one to relax for himself one atom of the Benedictine discipline, and if Bishop
              Daniel found it necessary on his accession to tighten the reins, we may judge
              by the demands he made on others in the exercise of his authority in later
              years, Winfrith himself, when called upon, would submit loyally to what was
              required.
               The years of
              preparation passed on, and at last, at the mature age of thirty, Winfrith's course of study was finished, and he took
              orders. Parents, guardians, teachers, and directors, all had done their best
              for him from his infancy onwards. Their labour had
              been well bestowed. It had been spent upon one to whom nature had given vigour and capacity, energy, and a wide sympathy, while all
              around could see that he had been touched with the celestial fire.
               His duties became
              now more extended. The work of the monks outside of the monasteries brought
              them intimately into relation with men as the teachers of the people. They
              taught the Ten Commandments and the Lord's Prayer, and the services of Baptism
              and of the Mass were explained so that the words could be understood. Besides
              this there was regular Sunday preaching in English, with exposition of portions
              of the Scriptures. One can imagine the scope this Sunday work would give to an
              eloquent man well versed in the study of the Bible. Just as Winfrith had
              distinguished himself by ardour in his studies, so he
              now began to attract attention by his growing capacity for influencing and
              dealing with men. His own brethren in the monastery bore testimony to his
              conspicuous talents, while outside the abbey his fame spread far and wide for
              his knowledge of the Scriptures and his eloquent and fervent preaching. Here
              evidently was the sort of man of whom the Church in those times stood greatly
              in need. There were those in high places who were on the watch for such men.
               An occasion soon
              arose that brought Winfrith forward into greater prominence. A synod had been
              held in Wessex, and King Ina desired to have explained, with some tact, to Berthwald, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the special
              circumstances under which the council had been convened. Ina turned to his
              kinsman, Aldhelm, Bishop of Sherburne, and from him
              received a strong recommendation to employ Winfrith. The mission was a delicate
              one, and in undertaking it Winfrith was to make his first entry into public
              life. Berthwald, who had been Archbishop since 693,
              is spoken of by Bede as a man learned in the Scriptures and well instructed in
              ecclesiastical and monastic discipline, though he does not appear to have been
              endowed with the highest capacity. Winfrith performed the office he had
              committed to him sufficiently well to demonstrate that he was qualified for a
              far wider sphere of action than the life of an ordinary monk.
               We have seen,
              however, that the life of a Benedictine monk was no light one. One of the
              objections often urged against the monastic system is that it is characterized
              by the most deliberate selfishness. It has been said that the good of his soul
              is the sovereign object of a monk's cares, and that his meditations, even if
              they embrace the compass of heaven, come round, ever and again, to find their
              ultimate issue in his own bosom. That may be true of some Orders ; it certainly
              need not be so of the Benedictine. It is not true of Winfrith's great contemporary, the Venerable Bede, who was at this time absorbed, as
              indeed he remained all his days, in a life of study in his cell at Jarrow. The fruits of the historical portions of that study
              remain to us still, and have been invaluable. Nor was it the case with
              Winfrith, who, the very antipodes of Bede, did not wrap himself out of
              temptation's way for the remainder of his life in the rigorous gloom of his
              cell. There was no morbid self-consciousness or self-seeking, for when brought
              in contact, as he was later on, with some of the mighty ones of the earth, he
              was distinguished for his modesty and his wilfully setting aside every opportunity for his personal aggrandizement.
               For six years from
              his ordination until he was six-and-thirty Winfrith continued in residence at Nutscelle under Abbot Winberct.
              He taught history, poetry, rhetoric, and the Holy Scripture. By his preaching
              and his increasing power over men's minds, as well as by his success in
              whatever high ecclesiastical duties were assigned to him, there was every
              reason to believe that he would attain a foremost position in the Anglo-Saxon
              Church. This evidently was the hope not only in Nutscelle,
              but of Bishop Daniel. Though both likely and possible, this was not to be. His
              sympathies were of a wider mould than would be
              satisfied in the limited sphere of official rank in the Church, and his
              enthusiasm was of a kind that would not bear the restraints such a position
              would impose. This is the missionary mind, and as in his case the spirit was
              linked with capacities exactly fitted for mission work, nothing was wanting but
              the spark to fire the zeal. It came in the shape of remarkable accounts that
              were reaching England of the results of Willibrord's evangelizing labours in Friesland. To Winfrith these
              were of surpassing interest, and their effect upon him was to alter the course
              of his whole life. The grand characteristics of his race impelled him forwards.
              The Saxon has been likened to the arrowy seeds of the dandelion, that travel on
              the wind and strike root afar. We see that shown in the colonizing faculty, and
              the missionary zeal is or ought to be to it, not only closely allied, but as
              the spirit to the body. Nor would he lose sight of the links of ancestry. From
              that self-same Friesland his heathen forefathers had swept down upon Britain,
              remaining to become Englishmen and Christians; while those who had stayed
              behind in Frisia, all of them his brethren, lay
              steeped in darkness and idolatry. Thus the keen sympathies of this man of
              capacity were told upon by the zeal to spread Christianity, by the claims of ancestry,
              and by the provision of a great opportunity. Little wonder was it that he
              embraced the preaching of the Gospel to the Frisians as the object of his life.
                
                   III
               Now the
              Anglo-Saxons, who by successive invasions between 450 and 547 contrived to
              spread themselves over a large part of this country, do not appear for a long
              time afterwards to have concerned themselves much about the kinsmen they had
              left behind them in the fatherland. To begin with, their departure from the
              fatherland had not, ac- cording to tradition, been altogether a voluntary
              matter. When Hengist and Horsa presented themselves on their arrival to Vortigern, the British king, Hengist is said to have expressed himself as follows :
              'Most noble king. Saxony, which is one of the countries of Germany, was the
              place of our birth; and the occasion of our coming was to offer our service to
              you or some other prince. For we were driven out of our native country for no
              other reason but that the laws of the kingdom required it. It is customary among
              us that, when we come to be overstocked with people, our princes from all the
              provinces meet together, and command all the youths of the kingdom to assemble
              before them : then, casting lots, they make choice of the strongest and ablest
              of them to go into foreign nations, to procure themselves a subsistence, and
              free their native country from a superfluous multitude of people. Our country,
              therefore, being of late overstocked, our princes met, and after having cast
              lots, made choice of the youth which you see in your presence, and have obliged
              us to obey the custom which has been established of old. In obedience,
              therefore, to the laws so long established, we put out to sea, and under the
              good guidance of Mercury have arrived in your kingdom. They had, in short, been
              sent away to find a new settlement for themselves, and were under oath never to
              return. And then, having found a new settlement, their minds were kept
              sufficiently occupied in getting a firm grasp of the home their swords had
              given them, in settling affairs with the British, and in establishing the
              various little kingdoms into which they had formed themselves. It was not till
              well on into the seventh century that they seem to have had either time or
              caring to look abroad. When they at last began to do so, it followed close upon
              the conversion of the country to Christianity, as the table given on p. 38 will
              show; and the inspiring cause was without doubt neither social nor political,
              but essentially the desire to carry the new religion into the ancestral home.
               
 
 
 Directly they
              turned to that great district of Northern Germany where their forefathers and
              kindred dwelt, they must have been stirred with enthusiasm over the ancient and
              almost invincible valour of their people. The Romans
              had never been able to subdue them, and although they had nominally been drawn
              within the great kingdom of the Franks it was no true subjugation, for their
              real independence had never been crushed out of them. It was impossible not to
              be proud of their intense love of liberty, their physical strength, their
              endurance and courage.
               But looked at from
              another side, the condition of these Saxon people was pitiable indeed. They
              were mere barbarians wrapped in the darkness of paganism. Their religion, which
              had descended to them with more or less variation from the ancient Germans and
              Scandinavians, was, like that of most rude barbarians, largely built upon the
              worship of external nature, mixed up with the adoration of special qualities
              and the endeavour to appease certain evil influences.
              They had, for example, Wodan (or Odin), the Supreme Ruler, the
              All-father, the god of victory, who dwelt in Walhalla, presiding over his
              countless armies of heroes, all drinking mead, feasting on bear's flesh, and
              continuing in this heavenly place the heroic battles in which their souls took
              delight during life on earth. Then there were Zio, the god of war Thor,
              the god of thunder and weather; Freyr, the sun, who rode on a
              golden bear; Freia, the moon, and the goddess of love; Hertka, the goddess of earth, Mother-earth;
              and Tuisco, the earth-born god. They
              believed in demons, dwarfs, in black and white elves, and in goblins, all of
              them regarded as supernatural beings of a kind, and all of them believed to be
              capable of helping or injuring them. Worship was performed in consecrated groves,
              in the recesses of dense forests, and under large sacred trees; and in these
              places, fit enough to create as well as to harbour superstition, they sent up their prayers, and offered up their sacrifices of
              human beings and animals. Their religion was cruel in its rites and intense in
              its superstitions. It enslaved men's minds under a yoke of abject dread of evil
              consequences falling upon them in this world, while it nerved them to do
              prodigies of valour on the battlefield, in the hope
              of being received and rewarded as heroes in the Walhalla of the world to come
              by no less a person than Wodan himself.
               It is no wonder
              that the English Saxons themselves, freshly led from such a cruel and dark
              idolatry into the liberty and light of Christianity, should be eager to convert
              their kinsmen. But their kinsmen held fast to their own religion. Through the
              Franks an endeavour had been made to propagate
              Christianity among them, but, by an error which is repeated till our day, it
              came to them so mixed with the pioneering efforts of political enterprise, that
              it was hated and repelled as the first sign of approaching trouble. It is a sad
              thing when nations are taught to regard the religion of peace as the precursor
              of war and loss of freedom.
               It was under the
              later Merovingian kings that the form of sovereignty was established over the
              Saxons. They were on the northern limit of the Frankish empire and more than
              troublesome to keep in control; and although the mayors of the palace contrived
              to enforce a tribute from them, these unruly people were the cause of continual
              warfare. And so things went on in strife and turmoil, with intervals of
              temporary subjection. At last the feeble and dissolute reigns of the Rois Fainéants, under the later part of the dynasty, saw
              rebellions and civil wars shake the empire of the Merovingian Franks to its
              foundations. At the battle of Testry, in 687, the
              preponderance of the Austrasian Franks over the Neustrian Franks was effected under Pepin of Heristal, and the irremedi- able
              fall of the kinsfs of the first race of the Neustrian Franks brought to pass. From this time, until the
              last of the race was deposed, the Merovingian kingship was a name and not a
              power, and the great Frankish empire was disintegrating. On the outskirts of
              the empire the restless German tribes, notably the Frisians, had practically
              shaken off their dependence and regained their liberty. Their reconquest
              required the military energy of a great leader. By vigorous action Pepin of Heristal succeeded in bringing most of them into subjection
              again. It was ten years after the battle of Testry before the Frisians under their king Radbod were
              subdued.
               It was just at
              this time that a real foothold was obtained in Friesland by St. Willibrord, whose missionary labours there, it will be remembered, had first fired the enthusiasm of Winfrith. We
              must, in a few words, gather up something of the history of Willibrord.
              Like Winfrith he also was an Englishman, but about five-and-twenty years Winfrith's senior. A native of Northumbria, he was trained
              in the monastery of Ripon under its founder, St. Wilfrid of York. His life
              between twenty and thirty was spent in Ireland ; but when about thirty-one he
              obtained permission to try and re-establish an abortive attempt of Egbert's to
              carry on missionary work in Friesland and Lower Germany. Landing with a small
              following of monks near the mouth of the Rhine , he actively set to work, favoured and protected by Pepin of Heristal.
              With the exception of a brief stay in Rome, where Pope Sergius consecrated him Archbishop of the Frisons, he devoted
              himself arduously to his labours and reaped great
              success. As Pepin reconquered the provinces in that part of the shattered
              empire, he not only commanded the civil governors of them to promote the work
              of the missionaries by every peaceful means in their power, but he held them
              responsible for the missionaries' lives. Willibrord established his episcopal see at Utrecht, of which he was the first bishop. The
              safety and success of the enterprise seemed now assured, and Willibrord's peculiar fitness in virtue of his tact and
              temperament added an individuality that was an inspiration to the mission.
              Stirring accounts were reaching England and stimulating sympathetic souls
              there. As we have seen, Winfrith's heart vibrated in
              harmony with them. Unfortunately, events in the Frankish empire became again
              acutely disturbed. Pepin of Heristal died in 714. By
              his strong hand and his impulsive and masterly mind he had been able to subdue
              into something like order the rebellious provinces of the empire. But at best
              it was only a repression, for at his death they struck out for independence
              again, and disorder reigned in his stead.
               Now although we
              talk of Pepin as reigning, it will not be understood that he did so in the
              sense of being king. He was mayor of the palace to the Merovingian king, who,
              in those degenerate days, lived the existence of a puppet and left all true
              governing and military action in the hands of his mayor. The puppet king of the
              day was Dagobert III.
               By his first wife, Plectrude, Pepin had two sons, Drogo and Grimoald, but neither survived him, though Grimoald left a son named Theudoald.
              By a second wife, Alpais, Pepin had a son Carl,
              afterwards the famous Carl Martel.
               Now when Pepin
              died, Plectrude, in the eastern part of the empire,
              captured Carl and endeavoured to secure the
              succession to the mayoralty of the palace for Theudoald.
              The western part of the empire opposed her and endeavoured to persuade the puppet king Dagobert to appoint one Ragin- fried. Civil war was
              the result, and the battle of Compiegne saw the defeat of Theudoald.
              Meanwhile Carl had escaped from captivity, and, throwing over Plectrude and Theudoald, the
              eastern empire rallied round him. At this juncture Dagobert III died, and those
              of the west, or the Neustrians, brought forward as
              the new sovereign Chilperic II. Chilperic,
              with his mayor Raginfried and his army of Neustrians, now marched against Carl and his army of the
              east, or Austrasians. On the north were the revolted
              German races, notably the Frisians and their king Radbod. Radbod threw in his interest with Chilperic and the Neustrians, and sailed from Frisia up the Rhine to join the Neustrians in an attack upon Cologne. This was in the year 716.
               At this point we
              turn our minds away from these stirring events and glance back for a moment to Nutscelle. Our eye falls upon a little company saying
              farewell to the monastery. It is Winfrith and two or three others who are
              setting out for London on their way to Friesland. It thus happens that as King Radbod is leaving his country on an errand of war Winfrith
              is starting for it on a mission of peace. Steadily the little English party
              continues its journey till Lundenwich, as London was
              then called, is reached. There they take passage in a vessel which at last
              lands them at Dorstet or Dorstadt,
              a place near Utrecht, and within the confines of Frisia,
              which included parts of Holland and Hanover.
               Once in the
              longed-for country and ready to put his hand to the plough, his enthusiasm
              would indeed have had to burn high if it was not to be damped by the disturbed
              state of the political atmosphere. The times were ill-fitted for commencing new
              missionary enterprise. Willibrord himself must have
              felt many a doubt about the stability of the mission he thought he had so well
              founded. Pepin's protecting hand was gone, the tribes were in revolt, and a
              dangerous gap had to be weathered before the continuity of authority was
              rearranged. But, according to their opportunities, Winfrith and his com- panions attempted to prosecute their work, though, as may
              be imagined, not with any great success. The Frisians had their minds absorbed
              with hopes of preserving their recently-recovered independence, as well as with
              anxiety, in relation to that liberty, over the foreign expedition on which
              their king had just left home.
               Radbod was conducting his forces up the Rhine,
              intending to effect a junction at Cologne with Chilperic and the Neustrians, who were advancing in that
              direction through the Ardennes. After an indecisive action with the Frisians
              alone, Carl attacked the combined forces at Ambleve in the Ardennes and inflicted a crushing defeat upon them. This battle was in
              the year 716, but it was followed next year by others which completely
              established the cause of Carl, and to which reference may be made later. Radbod was on the losing side, and in defeat he would
              realize that in the future there would have to be a reckoning with the military
              spirit of Carl, the son of his old conqueror Pepin.
               The effect of all
              this upon the Frisians in Friesland was demoralizing. In the disorder that
              prevailed a persecution of the Christians began. All that could be hoped for in
              such a turmoil was that those who had already accomplished something for the
              Christian religion in these desert places might be able to maintain their
              ground. Fresh seed sown under existing conditions would yield no fruit. Winfrith's practical sense showed him that this was so, and
              he wisely resolved not to give up his enterprise but, as others had had to do
              before him, to postpone it.
               Accordingly, in a
              little while we find him back in England again, in his cell at Nutscelle, only disappointed, not deterred. His expedition
              had at least given him some personal knowledge of the work and of the scene of
              his intended labours. For he was bent upon returning.
              From this intention he never seems to have served in the least degree. Had he
              been disposed to give it up, there was not wanting an inducement, since there
              occurred the opportunity of promotion at the monastery if he would only consent
              to accept it. Soon after Winfrith returned from Frisia old Abbot Winberct died at Nutscelle.
              The chapter of the monastery selected, and indeed implored, Winfrith to succeed
              him. Tenacious of his original purpose, all the reply he had for them was a
              firm refusal. Yet he was naturally interested in the continued welfare of his
              Alma Mater at Nutscelle. In their difficulty the
              monks appealed to their bishop, Daniel of Winchester. Now Daniel had endeavoured to dissuade Winfrith from his missionary
              expedition to Frisia. Perhaps the sight of Winfrith's enforced return to Nutscelle,
              yet inflexible purpose to resume his work in Frisia,
              inclined Daniel to be more favourable to his views.
              The bishop dispensed Winfrith from his election and in his stead sent Stephen
              to succeed Winberct as abbot of Nutscelle.
               During the time
              Winfrith continued to remain at Nutscelle awaiting
              the tide of events in Germany he determined when he next set out to proceed in
              a totally different manner. Instead of going straight from England into the
              country, more or less as a volunteer, he formed the plan of travelling first to
              Rome. Having taken his mission there direct from the hands of the Pope he would
              work with authority. In this arrangement he was, per-haps, following to some
              extent the example, possibly the advice, of Willibrord.
              But we see in it a fore-shadowing of that great
              ruling principle which afterwards characterized him, of bringing all forms of
              church work under the control and subjection of the papacy. Having obtained his
              commission from the Pope, it was his intention to enter Frisian territory from
              the German side. As it happened, this would bring him into the land of his
              desire in the wake of a conquering army, a fact that may have weighed with him.
              For over and above his resolve to link himself with the papal chair, it would
              be in his recollection that such religious work as had been already
              accomplished in Frisia had been performed under the
              sanction and support of Pepin. Naturally Winfrith's labours would be best undertaken under the continuance of
              the same rule, if, as Carl's successes indicated, its power and objects could
              be maintained. Bishop Daniel must have favoured Winfrith's plans, for he prepared the necessary letters for
              him to take to the Pope; and, no doubt, when Daniel visited Rome personally
              three years later he would still further endeavour to
              press the merits of his young priest upon the papal mind.
               As this
              preliminary visit to Rome would occupy several months, there was no longer any
              reason why Winfrith should remain biding his time in England. Besides this, now
              it was decided upon, it would be prudent to be well on the road before winter
              set in. Impressed, no doubt, by the magnitude of the task to which he was
              putting his hand, he was eager to begin carrying it into execution. He
              accordingly set himself to select his companions and to make his final
              preparations.
                
                   IV
               It was far into
              the year 718 when Winfrith bade farewell for the second and last time to Nutscelle and to his native country. Bishop Daniel of
              Winchester had given him his commendatory letters to the Pope, and he now set
              out upon the first stage of his long journey to Rome. Arriving safely again in
              London, he followed the customary route taken by English pilgrims to Rome, and
              embarked for a port in the north of France. Rounding the North Foreland he
              passed the place in Pegwell Bay where St. Augustine
              had set foot on English ground a hundred and twenty years before, and from the
              genius loci Winfrith no doubt received a fresh and sympathetic impetus in his
              own undertaking. Continuing his course through the Straits of Dover, past Cape Grisnez, the ship soon lay off the mouth of the river Cauche, the Cuent as it was then
              called; and, entering the port, he landed at once at Cuentawich,
              close to the ancient town of Etaples. Etaples, which is about twenty miles south of Boulogne, is
              now nothing but a decayed fishing-place, separated from the sea by a dreary
              stretch of sand, formerly styled the Marquenterre. In
              olden times it was a port of entry into France, and used as such by the Romans.
               At Cuentawich, near Etaples, then,
              Winfrith made his landing, and in the neighbourhood of Etaples he spent several weeks. It was a trysting
              place where he and his companions on the journey were to assemble, and where
              some final preparations that had to be made caused some delay. His enterprise
              attracted attention, and ensured him hospitality; and everything was done by
              prayers and the performance of religious duties to consecrate and encourage the
              mission.
               It was well on
              into the autumn before everything was ready, but at last the journey across
              Europe was begun. They hastened through France, for it was important to cross
              the Alps before winter commenced. This safely done, there was the kingdom of
              Lombardy lying between them and Rome. Though Lombardy was at that time under
              the most enlightened, virtuous, and humane of its sovereigns, Luitprand, the
              king was ambitious of conquering fresh territory in Italy, and kept his country
              in a disturbed state. The relations between the Lombard king and the Pope being
              far from cordial, the pilgrims had some fear that in traversing the country
              they might be detained or in some way interfered with. These apprehensions
              turned out to be groundless. Before long Winfrith and his companions found
              themselves safely in Rome, offering up their thankful prayers in the churches,
              and ready to show veneration and pledge their obedience to St. Peter and his
              successors.
               The Pope was
              Gregory II, who had succeeded to the pontificate three years previously. He was
              a far-seeing, capable man, and let no chance slip by of associating with
              himself men fitted by political or ecclesiastical force to advance and
              establish the position and influence of the Bishopric of Rome. The sixteen
              years of his reign (715-731) covered part of a remarkably difficult and
              changeful epoch. Events of the utmost importance were rapidly opening up with
              the times, and it would be speedily seen whether they were to bring with them a
              first and sovereign place to the Church in Rome, or to leave her comparatively
              stranded as merely a bishop's see among the churches of Christianity. Even at
              this earlier period of Gregory's pontificate there was required in the papal
              chair a skilful hand to guide the temporal interests
              of the Romish Church, and a wise judgement for the selection of men able and
              willing to forward her objects. The men she specially needed at this time were
              those who would show strength in elevating her claims and afford a loyal
              support in consolidating her views upon the dispensation of church government.
              A man of this sort now presented himself before Gregory in the person of
              Winfrith. Barely a hundred and twenty years before this the eyes of Gregory I
              had fallen in pity upon a group of young pagan Anglo-Saxon captives in the
              slave market at Rome, and the sight had inspired him with the longing to bring
              such a fine race within the Christian fold. And now, in the presence of the
              next Pope to bear the name of Gregory, there stood a man who came from the same
              land as the poor captives in the market. No benighted heathen, this man, but a
              sincere and ardent Christian; no slave, but a leader of men. Gregory II must
              have recalled the pious work of Gregory I, and felt his interest in Winfrith in
              no way lessened by it.
               It must not be
              thought, however, that the sight of an Anglo-Saxon was at all unusual in the
              streets of Rome. Quite the reverse. Following the example first set by Wilfrid
              of York, troops of bishops, monks, and religious enthusiasts began to wend
              their way there. And no sooner had an Anglo-Saxon king resorted thither in the
              person of Kedwall than princes began to make a
              similar pilgrimage from this country. As Milton says, "Many in the days of
              Ina, clerks and laics, men and women, hasting to Rome in herds, thought
              themselves nowhere sure of eternal life till they were cloistered there".
              Indeed the very road taken by Winfrith across France, over the Alps, and
              through Lombardy, was yearly becoming a highway for Anglo-Saxon pilgrims, eager
              to pay their devotions to Christianity as it was to be found in the Eternal
              City.
               Winfrith spent
              several months in Rome, no doubt greatly increasing his own ecclesiastical
              knowledge and the fervour of his self-consecration to
              his work. Brought also to the Pope's notice by Bishop Daniel's introduction,
              this time allowed of Gregory's investigating and proving the faith held by
              Winfrith, as well as of judging what stamp of man he was.
               Meanwhile Rome
              offered more than a sufficiency of interests to occupy Winfrith. There were the
              churches which would inflame his devotion. There were the ancient monuments of
              history that would fill him with veneration. And coming close to his own time
              and nation, he would be sure to visit the tomb of King Kedwall in one of the basilicas erected over the ancient catacombs, where he would read
              the 'large epitaph' mentioned by Milton.
               What may seem
              strange to us is the fact that he seems to have spent no small part of the time
              he was in Rome in gathering relics. To understand this question of relics we
              must remember that in the fourth century it began to be a fashion to build
              churches over the martyrs' tombs, out of reverence for their remains. It was
              but a step from extreme reverence to superstition and to a superstitious belief
              that in these remains there was some miraculous efficacy. When martyrs' tombs,
              as sites, became scarce, the next best thing seemed to be to build a church and
              to place relics in it, on the altar, and in the porch where they could be
              kissed by those who entered. Unobjectionable, therefore, in its origin, the
              practice distinctly opened the door to superstition, which is the enemy of
              religious truth. Yet relics are believed in to this day by thousands who are
              probably not one whit less sincere than Winfrith in giving credit to their
              miraculous power. All we can do is to remember that they were Christians full
              of fervent zeal, and based their hopes of eternal life upon their Christian
              faith.
               The winter in Rome
              wore on, and the spring of 719 came. With it came signs of Gregory's ap- proval. Winfrith found all his wishes sanctioned; and
              Gregory had the satisfaction of binding to the papal chair a man whose personal
              desire to serve Rome and bring others into subjection to it he could see, but
              of whose future usefulness and faithfulness he could as then form no
              conception. On May 15 Winfrith received the Pope's letters empowering him, as
              legate, to go and preach the Gospel to the heathen, a kind of general authority
              which allowed him to carry on his mission in any part of Germany, and direct
              from the Pope. And so, with Gregory's blessing on himself and his errand, he
              gathered his companions together and left Rome on his journey northwards.
               Crossing the
              Apennines, they found themselves once more in the kingdom of Lombardy, and
              under the protection of King Luitprand. If he had not had his original
              intentions firmly fixed in his mind Winfrith could have easily found work ready
              to his hand here. Lombardy was not then an ancient kingdom. It had only been
              established where it then ruled for about 150 years. The nation was still too
              young for the diverse tribes that comprised it to have become thoroughly
              assimilated. Believed to have been originally a Scandinavian race, the Lombards
              had settled themselves in that part of Germany immediately to the south-west of
              Hamburg, round about Linneburg. Later on they
              migrated further south till, just before they seized upon the country held by
              them at the time we are dealing with, they had dwelt on the immediate confines
              of the Roman empire. Many tribes from various parts of Germany were then
              included among the Lombards, and they still retained several of their
              individual characteristics, including especially their differences in religion.
              Not a few were heathen. Such as were Christian were nearly all Arians.
               Shortly before the
              time which we are considering, the Church of Rome had begun to work zealously,
              though carefully, amongst the Lombards, and, at the very moment when Winfrith
              was passing through the country, great hopes were arising that Luitprand would
              be brought to abandon his heresies and conform to the Romish faith. Ten years
              later those hopes were realized; but in the meantime Gregory had no great
              political faith in Luitprand, and it must be confessed that subsequent events
              served to warrant some of his suspicions. The position of Winfrith in Lombardy,
              as an emissary of the Pope, must therefore have been a delicate one, requiring
              tact and caution; and although Luitprand gave him a hospitable reception,
              Winfrith was no doubt far from sorry that his occupation lay elsewhere.
               Crossing the Alps,
              Winfrith and his companions passed quickly through Bavaria, across the Danube,
              and, making their way steadily northwards, entered Thuringia. Their thoughts
              and wishes were bent upon Frisia, but as yet Radbod was still alive, and his country was closed to them.
              But in Thuringia they found work in plenty, work not only amongst actual
              pagans, but also among Christians who were falling away from the faith. It will
              be remembered that when the Irish St. Columbanus went over to these regions
              towards the end of the sixth century, he found that the Christian faith
              existed, but that, in the neglect or absence of ecclesiastical discipline and
              the turmoil of wars, it was at a low ebb. By his own exertions, and those of
              the twelve monks who accompanied him, an immense revival was begun, and in
              spite of the interruptions caused by events in his life, was continued for many
              years. But before his death (615) Columbanus had the grief of seeing the people
              again wavering in their faith, and relapsing into druidical and other
              idolatries. Under feeble and ignorant priests, themselves very lax and
              indifferent about their allegiance and obedience to Rome, matters drifted into
              a still worse condition. Thus when Winfrith visited the country in 719, he
              found just the very work to call out his enthusiasm the correction of doctrine,
              the nurture and extension of the true faith, and the revival of church
              discipline. This was a labour demanding time as well
              as effort, and the fact that Winfrith does not seem to have accomplished any
              great success may have been due to that; for he could not have been many months
              there when, in the same year, 719, the death of Radbod of Frisia removed his difficulty in effecting an
              entrance into his longed-for sphere of labour.
               Radbod’s long reign covered an important epoch in the
              history of the Frisians. As for the Frisians themselves, they were from very
              ancient times a powerful race. They had lived upon friendly terms with the
              Romans till the latter were attacked and defeated by the Frisians for having endeavoured to tax them. Living in strength in their own
              territory, they were, as we have seen, part of the Frankish empire till the
              weakness ol the Merovingian rule gave them the chance
              of revolting under their king Radbod. Their brave defence of their independence did not prevent them
              receiving a severe lesson in defeat from Pepin in 697. Later came the severe
              humbling at the battle of Ambleve in 716, which Radbod only survived for three years. As for Radbod, he seems to have been, for the missionary's
              purpose, simply as impossible as he was for the politician's implacable. He
              remained a heathen of the heathen in spite of arguments with Willibrord, and, not long before the battle of Ambleve, had caused St. Wigbert to be put to death for having slaughtered some sacred oxen. From Wolfran, Bishop of Sens, he tolerated a great deal of
              interference, and was indeed at one time upon the point of giving way to the
              bishop. It is related that Radbod, being persuaded by Wolfran to be baptized, having dipped one foot in the
              laver, drew back the other and demanded whether there were more of his
              predecessors in paradise or in hell. On hearing that there were more in hell,
              he drew back the other foot and said "It is better, then, to follow the
              many than the few".
               Radbod's death was immediately made the opportunity by
              Carl Martel to advance into the country, and if he did not permanently
              subjugate it, he at least did so as far as was possible in the case of a brave,
              turbulent, and hitherto imperfectly conquered race.
               Although Poppo, who succeeded Radbod, was
              also such a heathen that he ultimately died in battle opposing the Christians,
              Carl Martel's action enabled Winfrith to proceed at last with his long-cherished
              enterprise. Without loss of time he joined Willibrord of Utrecht, who had now been in the missionary field for twenty-three years.
              Together they laboured with great success and in
              great harmony for the next three years, and Willibrord,
              who was past sixty years old , must have felt great help and satisfaction in Winfrith's assistance, for he formed the plan of making
              Winfrith his colleague and successor. Anxious to avoid such a limitation of his
              sphere, Winfrith made haste to leave the mission, excusing himself on the
              ground that his orders were to preach the Gospel throughout Germany.
               He now betook
              himself to Hesse and Saxony, and threw himself with great ardour into the conversion of the tribes inhabiting that district. Great success
              attended his labours, and, protected by two native
              chiefs who were converted by his preaching, he was able to found a monastery at Amoneburg.
               Time had gone on.
              It was four years since Winfrith had left Rome, and, gratified with his
              success, he resolved to report the results of his work to the Pope, who, in
              reply, at once requested his attendance in Rome. On his arrival Gregory II
              received him with a warm and distinguished welcome. The Pope saw that in
              Winfrith he had not mistaken his man, and he perceived in him zeal and character
              and talents which in the future might be of still further use to the Church.
              Presently marks of special favour were bestowed, and
              Winfrith was consecrated in St. Peter's, on November 30, 723, a Regionarius or Regionary Bishop, that is to say, a bishop unattached
              to any specified diocese. And, as if to affiliate him for
                ever to the mother Church as well as bind him more strongly to the
              service of the Pope as his Father in God, the old home-name of Winfrith,
              apparently the last link that was left with his parents in the flesh, was
              dropped for ever, and he was renamed Boniface. It is
              said that for some little time past he had been adopting this name, and even
              calling himself by the two combined Winfrith-Boniface. But it seems quite
              certain that whatever personal wishes existed, Pope Gregory sanctioned the
              change of name, if, indeed, he did not actually suggest it; and from the time
              of this second visit to Rome Winfrith is always spoken of as Boniface.
               Keenly alive as
              Gregory II was to the condition of the times and their influence on the
              political future of the Church of Rome, this visit showed him that Boniface's
              work had in it a value over and above that of the mere missionary. And when,
              after receiving a confession of faith, he called on Boniface to swear afresh
              his loyalty to the papal chair, Gregory must have felt he was dispatching on a
              highly im- portant errand a man from whom much was to
              be hoped, trustworthy because, in a worldly sense, not personally ambitious,
              enthusiastic in the work of conversion, yet completely loyal to the faith of
              Rome.
               The following was
              the oath to which Boniface was called on to subscribe : "I, Boniface,
              bishop, by the grace of God, promise to thee, Blessed St. Peter, chief of the
              Apostles, and to thy blessed representative Pope Gregory, and to his
              successors, in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, the undivided
              Trinity, and by this thy most sacred body, never to do anything in any way
              against the unity of the general and universal Church, and to observe fidelity
              and purity and fellowship in the interests of thy Church and towards thee, to
              whom the Lord God hath given the power of binding and of loosing,
              and to thy aforesaid representative and to his successors. And if I shall see
              any priests altering anything contrary to the institutions of the Holy Fathers,
              I will hold no communion or fellowship with them, but will rather, if possible,
              prevent them : but if not I will faithfully and immediately report such persons
              to my apostolical lord. And if (which God forbid) I ever, by will or occasion,
              do anything against these my promises, let me be found guilty at the eternal
              judgement, let me incur the chastisement of Ananias and Sapphira, who dared to
              lie unto you and despoil you of part of their property. I, Boniface, a humble
              bishop, have with my own hand written this attestation of oath, and depositing
              it on the most sacred body of the sacred Peter, I have, as it is prescribed,
              taking God to judge and witness, made the oath which I promise to keep"
               Truly a document
              with all the wordy length of a legal parchment!
                
                   V
               Gregory's next
              duty was to take care that Boniface was put on the best possible footing with
              the governing power in the country to which he was returning. To this end he
              gave him letters of introduction to Carl Martel, requesting personal protection
              and assistance for the mission.
               Since we last
              heard of him, Carl Martel had steadily been becoming not merely a great power
              in the Frankish kingdom, but a person of striking importance in Europe. Nearly
              ten years had now passed since the death of his father, Pepin of Heristal, and this, the youngest son of Pepin, was stepping
              prominently to the front to support and extend his father's work. We have seen
              how he defeated Chilperic and Radbod at Ambleve in 716, and also how on Radbod's death in 719 he had promptly made his way into Frisia and brought the troublesome inhabitants into
              something approaching to subjection. Nor had the four years between then and
              the year of which we are writing been idly spent : the amount of work waiting
              to be done made it impossible for him to be inactive. He resolutely applied
              himself to the gradual crushing of his personal opponents, and set himself by
              reconquest to bring back some of those turbulent tribes who had escaped from
              under the rule of the Frankish empire. Though so much still remained to be
              done, Carl Martel had already begun to build up for himself something of that
              great military renown and that reputation of being a champion of Christendom
              which in years shortly to follow made him such a mighty power.
               Just as the
              Anglo-Saxon kings had been finding it in England, so Pepin and Carl Martel
              experienced too that their efforts to bring the people under the influence of
              good and lawful government were greatly forwarded by those who were at work
              replacing heathenism by Christianity. It certainly is an admirable trait in
              these grand old early missionaries that they did not run counter to the
              political forces of the country in which they laboured.
              They taught men that among other duties was the duty of rendering unto Caesar
              the things that are Caesars, while at the same time they softened, civilized, christianized Caesar himself. So far was this the fact that
              the Cross was the sign of those Germans beyond the Rhine who admitted the
              Frankish supremacy, while paganism was the symbol of those who rejected it.
               As was to be
              expected, therefore, Carl Martel received Boniface willingly, and not only did
              he consent to the prosecution of the missionary's work, but he did all he could
              to assist it. A link was thus formed between these two men which became
              stronger as events threw them more together. Not far apart in age Carl Martel
              being born in 689 gives Boniface a little seniority there is no doubt that the
              direct influence of the latter did a great deal to influence the character of
              Carl Martel and the reputation he bears in history. The link be- came not only
              a powerful factor in erecting the Carolingian dynasty in its proud place, but
              it acquired for the first time in history a firm footing for the temporal power
              of the Church of Rome.
               Carl gave Boniface
              a letter commending him to the consideration of all with whom he came into
              contact in the country. It was entitled "Carol. Maj. Dom : Epistola Generalis" that is
              to say, a "general epistle" from Charles, mayor of the palace.
               Boniface now set out
              on his work more fully equipped than he had ever been before, specially
              commissioned by the Pope, and sanctioned and protected by the governing powers
              of the country in which his work lay. There was no temptation to put off time
              by remaining in Carl Martel's palace, where the immorality and whole mode of
              life were only what he could condemn. Once more, therefore, he made his way
              into Hesse and Thuringia.
               Resuming his labours where he had laid them down when he went to Rome,
              all his previous experience now came to his aid. His work was planned out with
              care, and every preparation made to carry it on with energy and spirit. Fervent
              preaching was followed by great success, and large numbers were baptized into
              the Christian faith. The need of more assistance soon made itself apparent, and
              Boniface asked for fresh helpers from his old bishop, Daniel of Winchester.
              Ever since he had left Nutscelle Boniface had
              retained his reverence for his old director, and a correspondence had been kept
              up between them. Boniface sought advice, and Daniel gave it as only one who
              knew the temperament and capacity of the missionary could do. Here is one of
              Daniel's letters by way of example :
               "You must not
              raise your voice against the genealogies of their false divinities. Rather let
              them declare to you how their gods were born one from another by carnal
              copulation; then you can readily show that gods and goddesses of this human
              origin can be no other than human beings, and that as they have once begun to
              exist they cannot contrive to exist for ever. Thence proceed to ask them
              whether the world has had a commencement, or whether it is eternal, and if it
              has commenced who has created it? Again, ask them where did these deities who
              have been born reside before the creation of the world? If they say that the
              world is eternal, who was it that governed it before the birth of the gods? How
              did they bring the world under subjection to their laws, seeing that the world
              had no need of them? Whence came the firstborn among themselves, and by whom
              was he generated from whom all the rest are descended? And further ask them
              whether they think the gods ought to be honoured for
              the sake of temporal and present happiness, or of the future and eternal? If
              they say for temporal happiness, then let them show in what way are the pagans
              better off than the Christians. You shall address them with these and suchlike
              objections, not by way of provocation and insult, but with the greatest
              moderation and mildness. And from time to time you shall compare their superstitions
              with the Christian dogmas, touching them lightly indeed, so that the pagans may
              remain confounded rather than exasperated, that they may blush at the absurdity
              of their prejudices, and not suppose that we are ignorant of their false
              opinions and sinful practices. Further, you shall present to them the greatness
              of the Christian world, compared with which they are themselves so
              insignificant. And to prevent them boasting the immemorial sovereignty of their
              idols, take heed to teach them that idols were indeed adored through the whole
              world until the time when the world was reconciled to God by the grace of Jesus
              Christ".
               Such a letter savours of the mild manner of the gentle student. Perhaps
              that mild colouring and reasonable argument were put
              into it purposely, in the hope that thereby a drag might to some extent be
              placed upon the impulsive and demonstrative methods Boniface was adopting. If
              that were so, they had no restraining influence. Boniface found it more
              congenial to his own impulses, and almost essential to a successful dealing
              with a vigorous and superstitious race, to oppose by bold and emphatic means a
              heathen people, turbulent and independent, who regarded the missionaries as the
              sure pioneers of the Frankish thraldom. He therefore continued
              not only to preach the Gospel, but he began openly to assume the offensive
              towards the rites and superstitions of these pagans.
               We have already
              seen what a cruel religion it was in exchange for which Boniface was offering
              the people the simple and peaceful Gospel of Christianity. It was the sacred
              places where these fierce and warlike heathen practised their faith that Boniface now determined with his own hands to demolish.
               Near Geismar, in
              Upper Hesse, there stood a very ancient oak, the great Donnereiche or 'oak of thunder'. For ages it had been held in the highest veneration. In
              size and height it stood out as a true monarch of the forest, and it was held
              sacred to the god Thor. Anxious by some imposing stroke to make a deep
              impression on the heathen mind, Boniface and a few attendants approached this
              oak, and determined to fall it to the ground. The superstitious and angry
              multitude surrounded the missionary party, bent upon slaying any who should so
              impiously defy their deity. Boniface himself, axe in hand, struck the first
              blows at the tree. While still engaged at his work, a mighty wind is said to
              have suddenly swept over the forest and completed his task for him. The great
              Thor's oak lay upon the ground, broken into four pieces. The failure of their
              god to make any interposition or to avenge the insult affected the people's
              minds very much as the silence of Baal to the appeals of Ahab and the priests
              influenced the idolatrous Israelites. The sudden intervention of the wind
              turned the balance definitely in favour of the
              Christians' God, and so immediately and deeply were they impressed that they
              offered no opposition to Boniface and his attendants carrying off the pieces of
              the fallen tree to build an oratory to St. Peter.
               At Eichstadt there
              was a local god named Stuffo whom the people made
              much of. Boniface boldly exorcized Stuffo, and the
              god is said to have fled and hid himself in a cave, known afterwards as Stuffensloch or Stuffo's hole.
              And so the work went on. The barbarians, amazed at seeing their sacred groves
              and trees cut down and their gods insulted and defied with impunity, at length
              admitted the inefficacy of their idolatry and the superiority of Christianity.
              They were baptized in thousands.
               So greatly were
              his missionary labours now prospering that Boniface
              urgently felt the need of more labourers. He
              naturally turned once again to his own native country, and, in answer to his
              appeal, his old bishop Daniel sent further help, this time monks and nuns and
              books. With such aid enormous progress was made, and its extent soon entitled
              Boniface to be called the Apostle of Germany. He now began to found regular
              churches, feeling certain, with such a band of helpers, of being able to
              maintain ecclesiastical services. This was a great advance, for such churches
              notably those at Erfurt, Frizlar, Ohrdruff,
              and Altenberg became permanent centres of activity and gave stability to the mission. But Boniface by no means
              confined himself to the work of conversion; he set himself earnestly to that of
              edification and consolidation. It has already been said that there remained
              from the work of St. Columban some half-relapsed Christians of doubtful faith
              and of lukewarm allegiance to Rome. It was part of the creed of Boniface to
              allow no divergences of belief. And, indeed, granting fully the wisdom of
              allowing toleration of various de- nominations of Christians in countries where
              the Christian religion has been long and firmly established, it is quite
              certain that the difficulties of converting the heathen are immensely and most
              unfairly increased when Christians of different creeds, only too often
              quarrelling openly over minor doctrinal differences, enter the same missionary
              field together. When Christ was told that one who was not following in His
              train was nevertheless doing miracles in His Name, He declined to forbid him on
              the ground that "he who is not against us is on our part". With all
              their enthusiasm, too, many of Christ's followers have been able to breathe out
              the same liberality as their Master. What we find in the attitude between St.
              Augustine and Dinooth, we find again in the case of
              Boniface and the remnant of St. Columban's mission. Things are no better in our
              own day, as one may see by reading how the Roman Catholics conducted themselves
              towards Mackay before King Mwanga in Uganda. Before the heathen, Christians
              should show that they are at least one in Christ. This is what Boniface strove
              to bring about, remembering, no doubt, how troublesome such dissensions had
              been in his old home in Wessex. He laboured to bring
              the offspring of the Celtic mission into harmony with his own work,
              consolidating Christianity, uniting all under the one jurisdiction of Rome,
              believing that in St. Peter was the 'rock' on which Christ had said His Church
              should be built.
               While doing all
              this with immense energy and earnestness, Boniface framed his teaching upon
              simple truths, what Merivale calls "the plainest doc- trines of Scripture
              and the fundamental rules of universal morality". Several of his homilies
              have been preserved. The titles of fifteen of them have been taken from Migne's work and are as follows :
               1. De fide recta.
               2. De origine humanae conditionis.
               3. De gemina iustitiae operatione.
               4. De octo beatitudinibus evangelicis.
               5. De fide et operibus dilectionis.
               6. De capitalibus peccatis et praecipuis Dei preceptis.
               7. De fide et charitate.
               8. Qualiter hie vivatur, qualiter in futurum vivendum sit.
               9. Qui actus sint omni studio evitandi, et qui tota virum instantia sectandi.
               10. De Incarnatione Filii Dei et humani generis reparatione.
               11. De duobus regnis
              a Deo statutis.
               12. Exhortatio de
              ieiuniis Quadragesimae.
               13. Quare ieiunia
              Quadragesimae magis aliis ieiuniis veneranda sint.
               14. In die solemnitatis paschalis.
               15. De abrenuntiatione in baptismate.
               It is quite clear
              from these titles that Boniface was not contented with anything short of a deep
              and real belief in Christianity. The sermons dealt practically with their
              subjects, and that, for instance, which is an address to neophytes on their
              baptism is an excellent exhortation with which no Christian would disagree.
               All through his
              work Boniface was aided and encouraged by frequent correspondence with Pope
              Gregory, in whose vigorous and outspoken mind Boniface found that kindred and
              decisive spirit which his own needs sought and required. This led to the
              settlement of many questions which were sure to keep rising up in such a new
              and extensive work as he was engaged in.
               But in 731 Pope
              Gregory II died. On being elected to the pontificate he had brought to the
              office three important qualifications : he was Roman by birth, he had been
              educated under the special supervision of Popes Sergius and Constantine, and he was possessed of remarkable personal energy. Gibbon
              calls him the founder of the papal monarchy; and one willingly concedes him the
              title in view of the events which crowded the sixteen years of his reign,
              especially the last three of them, which nearly covered that great Iconoclast
              controversy with Leo the Emperor of the West. As a Roman, Gregory perhaps
              espoused Rome's side with more than clerical heat, and in no way regretted that
              the rupture with Leo became a revolution, and that Rome, detached from the rule
              of the eastern empire, set up as a republic, so long as the Pope as its head.
              Nor must we altogether frame our ideas of Gregory personally from the
              outrageous tone of his well-known letters to Leo, where he announces in one
              breath that "the eyes of the nations are fixed on our humility", and
              in the next one tells Leo that he implores Christ to "send unto you a
              devil, for the destruction of your body and the salvation of your soul".
              Gregory was made of better stuff than this would make us suppose.
               His successor was
              Gregory III and Boniface lost no time in bringing himself into communication
              with him, anxious, no doubt, to set an example of prompt submission and loyalty
              to the new Pontiff. Boniface selected messengers whom he sent to Rome, ostensibly
              to consult the Pope upon special difficulties. These messengers Gregory
              received with great marks of respect, and on their return they brought Boniface
              the pallium, and the title of archbishop, without attachment to any particular
              see, but establishing him as Primate of All Germany and Apostolic Vicar. These honours carried with them the power of founding such new
              episcopal sees as he thought were needed, and of consecrating bishops to them.
              We shall see later that this power was made use of. Meanwhile we may mention
              the founding of many new churches and, especially, the establishment of a
              monastery at Oxford.
               Now while Boniface
              was thus ardently engaged, in this particular portion of Europe, in uprooting
              heathenism and replacing it by Christianity, an event of the very first
              historical importance was in progress, an event so grave that we must turn
              aside to give it attention. Forces were at work which were threatening the very
              existence of Christianity on the continent of Europe. Europe, though it remains
              without the honour of having been the actual cradle
              of Christianity, has at any rate been its chief nursery and stronghold; but, at
              the very time of which we are writing, the followers of Mohammed had invaded
              it, and the Cross and the Crescent came face to face in bitter and implacable
              conflict for the mastery.
               It was only a
              hundred years before this time that Mohammed himself had died. In spite of the
              two parties under which his followers ranged themselves after his death,
              Islamism had spread. The Saracenic empire which he founded among the Arabians
              rapidly extended, and spread the religion far and wide at the point of the
              sword. The tide flowed ever onwards. Five years after the false prophet's death
              the city of Jerusalem was conquered by the Arabs : then Palestine, Egypt,
              Arabia, Asia Minor, Syria, Persia, parts of India, and the whole of the north
              coast of Africa, were submerged beneath the religion of Islam. Race after race
              had yielded in terror of extermination, for Mohammed's doctrines directed the
              propagation of the faith by eternal warfare and unlimited slaughter of those
              who opposed it; and, having yielded, they came to view their creed with
              fanaticism, and joined in spreading it by the same terrible methods.
               We have seen that
              the Saracens had penetrated along the North African coast. In the year 710 they
              crossed the narrow arm of the Mediterranean that separated them from the
              southernmost Spanish coast, and effected a small landing, under Tarik, at the
              place now called Gibraltar, literally Gebel-al-Tarik. Next year a larger body
              followed, and by the aid of still stronger reinforcements they succeeded in
              firmly planting themselves in Spain. Spain, at that period, was under the
              degenerate rule of the Visigothic king Roderic. The Saracens ultimately
              succeeded in bringing this king to battle at Xeres,
              and completely overthrew him and his dynasty. The defeat at Xeres,
              which was in 712, allowed the Crescent to prevail over the whole Spanish
              peninsula as far north as the Pyrenees; and the completeness of the conquest is
              realized when it is remembered that Mohammedans were not driven entirely out of
              Spain again till Granada was reconquered from the Moors about eight hundred
              years afterwards.
               Firmly seated in
              Spain, the Saracens in a year or two began to long for the fertile Burgundian
              provinces across the Pyrenees, and in 718 they made their first attempt at
              invasion. No great progress was made till some years later, when, in 731 or
              732, a lieutenant or viceroy of the Caliph Yesid,
              named Abderrahman, appeared with an immense army and
              pushed the conquest as far as Tours on the banks of the Loire. No one seemed to
              have been able to stay his progress, and Europe appeared to be giving way
              before the advance of Islam. There was only one great military spirit in
              Christian Europe capable of rendering help at such a crisis, and this was no
              other than Carl Martel. He was mentioned last as assisting Boniface, then
              returning from his visit to Rome in 723, by letters of recommendation to the
              civil powers of the empire. The interval between that time and the year 732
              which we are considering had been spent by Carl in warlike expeditions
              successively against the Frisians, the Swabians, the Bavarians, and, again, the
              Saxons. Though impelled to these expeditions by political reasons, he was also
              in a sense the defender of Christianity, for these wars were against forces of
              heathenism that were filled with a hatred of the Christian religion. And now
              Christian Europe, terror-stricken, turned to him for help not only against the
              heathen on the north but against the fanatical and merciless Mohammedan on the
              south. Fortunately, political considerations of themselves obliged Carl to
              move, for in penetrating as far as Poitiers and Tours, the very centre of modern France, Abderrahman had invaded Neustria.
               Carl was no
              stranger to the ground. Only the previous year (731) he had been in Aquitaine
              quelling a rebellion. He now lost no time in making his way south again,
              resolutely bent on barring the progress of the Mohammedans. The two immense
              armies came face to face on the plains between Tours and Poitiers. Carl and Abderrahman were not men to be satisfied with anything
              short of a decisive result. For Europe it was to be the religion of Christ or
              that of Mohammed, an issue that justifies such a battle as that of Tours being
              called one of the great decisive battles of the world. The conflict lasted more
              or less for three days, and the slaughter was terrible. In the end the Saracens
              were put to flight, leaving Abderrahman among the
              thousands of slain, and the victory of the Franks was complete. For Carl, ever
              afterwards known as Martel, the Hammer, the triumph was a glorious one. For the
              Christian religion in Europe it was salvation, and Carl was proclaimed its
              champion.
               Though political
              reasons were sufficient to have roused this great warrior to the destruction of
              the conquering Saracens, it would be unfair not to credit him with having had
              his arm still further strengthened for the conflict by the knowledge Boniface
              had had plenty of opportunities of imparting to him; and he would at least
              believe that in going forth to war against the enemies of Christ's Church he
              was fighting the cause of the God of Battles.
               When, after
              punishing some rebels in Burgundy, Carl turned northwards, we can imagine the
              exultation with which Boniface would meet one who, protecting him in the early
              part of his own mission, was now the military champion of the faith. In 734
              Carl Martel applied himself once more to effect the subjection of the
              troublesome Frisians and their heathen Duke Poppo,
              successor to Radbod; and the sword of Carl and the
              preaching of Boniface went forward together in the work of conquest,
              civilization, and conversion. They were stirring years, and each of these great
              men had his hands full. It was not long before Carl had to come south once more
              to adjust domestic difficulties in Aquitaine, as well as to attend to a renewed
              attempt of the Saracens to enter Gaul in 737. We need not follow him in these.
               As for Boniface,
              he began to prepare for a personal visit to Rome, which he had not paid since
              Gregory III succeeded to the pontificate (732); and in 738 he set out upon his
              journey. It will be remembered that Gregory III had created him Archbishop and
              Primate of All Germany. Boniface, therefore, had, as an object in his visit,
              the bringing of himself into personal conference with the new Pope, and the
              reporting upon the work he had been carrying out, especially in regard to the
              founding of new churches.
               Gregory received
              him with every possible mark of esteem, and, as the old chroniclers say, as a
              living saint. Rome, at any rate, had had no truer, harder- working son, and
              Gregory might well show Boniface all the marks of reverence to which his
              personal character and his labours on behalf of the
              Church entitled him. What he had to bring with him as the harvest of his work
              was the account of the churches he had founded and which he wished brought
              regularly into disciplinary relations with Christianity, as it existed under
              the Church in Rome and under the Pope, as its sole head and chief.
               As a mark of
              special honour Gregory appointed Boniface Legate of
              the Apostolic See in Germany, and thus placed him in a position of high
              authority. There are some legates whose office is merely an appendage to an
              ecclesiastical office. These are of inferior grade to those specially
              constituted, and who are endowed with authority not only for purposes of church
              discipline but as ambassadors to sovereign princes. We shall see that
              Boniface's future relations with the Carolingian dynasty made this position one
              of political as well as ecclesiastical importance to him, to the Pope, and to
              the princes.
               
               VI
               Boniface's visit
              to Rome in 738 was not a long one. There was too much active work on hand for
              time to be spent upon needless delays. Boniface himself was eager to return to
              his labours, while Gregory may have felt it as well
              to have his influence not too long removed from Carl Martel, considering the
              serious way in which political perplexities were accumulating. Gregory's hands
              were full, dealing with the difficulties of the situation and the outlook.
               It will be
              remembered that his predecessor in the papacy, Gregory II, had been moved to
              ire and rebellion by the promulgation of the Emperor Leo's orders against
              images. Rome had for some time been developing a feeling of independence of the
              rule of Constantinople, and this asserted itself under Leo's action in the
              shape of a throwing off of the allegiance. For a moment, till self-interest
              showed it its mistake, Rome actually joined itself to the greatest enemies the
              Greek emperor had in Italy. These were the Langobards.
               After their first
              inroad into Italy, the energy of the Langobards was completely prejudiced by
              their mode of government : they divided their lands into provinces, each of
              which was under a separate and independent duke. But having reunited under one
              king, they now again began to extend their forces further into Italy, and
              threatened to deprive the Greek emperor of all his remaining possessions in
              that country. Gregory II soon saw that Rome was in danger of being absorbed and
              degraded into the position of a mere metropolitan bishopric. He therefore
              considered the danger most urgent, and it was in this critical situation that
              things stood at his death in 731. But Gregory III was equally alive to the
              position. Unfortunately his methods irritated Luitprand, the Langobard king;
              and when the Pope gave asylum to one of Luitprand's rebellious dukes, Luitprand, disregarding his personal reverence for the
              spiritual side of Rome's claims, determined to possess himself of the whole of
              Italy. The Langobards pushed forward to the gates of Rome, and in 739 Gregory
              III was obliged to turn elsewhere for help. He sought his aid from Carl Martel,
              addressing his petition "to the most excellent lord, son Charles,
              sub-king". Although Carl was at the very least as good a Christian as his
              clerical biographers care to admit, Rome no doubt reaped a great advantage from
              having such an influence as Boniface's at work upon him. Gregory must have
              built some hopes upon it as he anxiously awaited the response. For he knew that
              Carl Martel was on excellent terms with Luitprand. To make a request to Carl
              for help against Luitprand was therefore not without danger, and he had been
              slow to make it. His fear was that an alliance between the two might end in
              Luitprand effecting his purpose and the shattering of Rome's prospects.
               But Carl did not
              come. Barely fifty years old, he seems to have begun feeling the inevitable
              effects of his past arduous life. Wearied with his own wars and difficulties,
              anxious too, no doubt, to avoid hostility with Luitprand, yet attached to the
              chair of St. Peter, he contented himself with persuading Luitprand to withdraw
              his forces on condition of Gregory not further interfering between him and his
              vassals on secular matters. Gregory had been wrong, and the lesson was good.
              Well would it have been for the Christian religion if "the Church" in
              all succeeding ages had not often needed such a lesson, and if some of its
              worldly and haughty princes had only recalled to their minds the warning that the
              Kingdom of the Christ is not of this world.
               When Boniface left
              Rome in the previous year, 738, he went straight to Bavaria. That country was
              inhabited by a Celtic population who were formerly subject to the Romans, but,
              having been conquered a century before by the Frankish kings, were ruled by
              governors. The duke of the day was Odilo, a man who
              not long afterwards provoked some trouble by marrying the runaway daughter of
              Carl Martel. Duke Odilo asked Boniface to visit the
              country and reform certain clerical abuses.
               In 738 Bavaria had
              only one bishopric Passau; and it had not long had even that. At the beginning
              of the eighth century Passau had begun to rise again from the desolation that
              barbarism had inflicted upon the surrounding country for a couple of centuries;
              and under the help of one Theodore it became a centre of spiritual guidance to the outlying populations. From its antiquity, and also
              from its commanding situation at the junction of the Inn with the Danube, it
              was well entitled to be such a centre. When the
              eighth century grew a little older, this single bishopric was not sufficient,
              as Boniface promptly discovered when he went to visit Bavaria. He therefore
              divided the country into four bishoprics by founding the three new sees of
              Ratisbon, Saltzburg, and Freisinghein;
              and these sees, as well as the bishops appointed to them, were duly confirmed
              by the Pope. Among the names of the bishops there remains to us that of Wiwilo, formerly Bishop of Lorch, who was now installed at
              Passau.
               Continuing his
              journeys with a view to the further establishment of church discipline and
              organization, Boniface erected bishoprics at Erfurt for Thuringia, at Baraburg (afterwards translated to Paderborn) for Hesse,
              and at Wurtzburg for Franconia; while a return visit
              to Bavaria indicated to him the desirability of yet another bishop's see there,
              and this he placed at Achstadt.
               Boniface hoped, by
              planting his lieutenants in these ecclesiastical seats, to obtain a firmer
              control over a clerical indifference to the law and the authority of the Romish
              Church, which had prevailed to a disturbing degree. Making all allowance for
              certain statements against Carl Martel, to which we shall recur presently, the
              civil powers seem to have left Boniface to carry out his arrangements practically
              according to his own judgement.
               We must now return
              to the old difficulties at Rome between the Langobards and the Pope. In 740 the
              troubles came to the front again. The agreement that Carl had brought about
              only the year before did not last long, for both parties seem to have broken
              through the conditions. Luitprand appeared outside the very gates of the city,
              and Gregory was placed between terror and perplexity. Think of what was at
              stake. The Pope of Rome was succeeding in making his see paramount over the
              Christian Church : so much for spiritual matters. He had just detached himself
              in rebellion from his emperor, but as yet had not ventured to take independent
              political action : so much for temporal matters. The Rome he hoped for, the
              Rome as it came to be, was in the act of being born. To Gregory it appeared as
              if Luitprand would destroy it at its birth. In effect, however, it proved that
              the very opposing forces of the Langobards compelled Gregory to perform such
              decisive acts as in the end helped to achieve for Rome what he wished. We can
              understand that Gregory's attitude with regard to the Emperor Leo and the
              Byzantine empire, and his experience of the previous year that Carl's
              friendship for Luitprand weighed strongly with him, constituted a predicament
              in which the Pope could not but hesitate anxiously before moving. But the
              terror of the Langobards' near presence produced a panic that soon overcame all
              else. Carl Martel was implored to give his powerful help. The appeal was a
              remarkable one : it came from Rome as from Church and State combined. It was a
              noteworthy step, amounting to a declaration, on the part of Rome. As head of
              the Church, Gregory offered to Carl by his messengers the keys of the sepulchre of St. Peter. As the ruler of a state, Gregory
              conferred on Carl the Roman title of Patricius. With
              all its ambitions, some treasured for the future, others claimed at the moment,
              pontifical Rome was yet but in its earliest infancy and sought protection in
              Carl Martel.
               Considering the
              pronounced and implacable ideas held by Boniface in favour of papal power and supremacy, and bearing in mind his influence with Carl and
              his position in Germany, one can well believe that when Bishop Anastasius and
              Presbyter Sergius brought their message from Pope Gregory,
              Boniface may have had something to do with paving the way for the marked
              consideration with which their mission was received.
               Carl gave
              Gregory's messengers his assurances of help, and bestowing costly gifts upon
              them, sent two messengers of his own to accompany them to Rome and to deliver
              his reply. He again exerted his friendly offices with Luitprand. This time it
              was with better effect, for Luitprand was, after all, a friend of peace, a man
              of great wisdom, and one to whom the historian of the Langobards gives a high
              reputation. For a short space of time all was now quiet between Rome and the
              Langobards.
               Events, like
              everything else, move on, and great changes were just at hand. Death made great
              inroads, and in the year 741 three leading and remarkable figures passed from
              before the eyes of the world, namely, the Emperor Leo III, Pope Gregory III,
              and Carl Martel.
               Leo III was, as
              may be supposed, the last of the emperors of the East to whom a Pope ever
              applied for confirmation of his election to the papacy. When 741 brought a new
              Pope and a new Byzantine emperor, matters between them were on a very different
              ecclesiastical and political footing from what they were ten years before, when
              Gregory III ascended the papal chair.
               Gregory III's
              death in November, 741, brought to an end a short but vigorous rule. He was
              succeeded by Zachary, to whom Boniface, always prompt to show his devotion and
              respect for the authority of the Pope, reported upon his mission in Germany.
              Zachary readily confirmed Boniface in his work and position.
               Carl Martel died
              in October, 741, at his palace in Chiersey on the
              Oise, and was buried in the church of St. Denis. Placed as Boniface had been,
              the loss of such a great and powerful supporter in the state must have been
              almost more severe a trial than the death of the Pope himself. Carl was not
              immaculate, but when we reflect how outspoken and unsparing Boniface was in his
              letters and appeals to erring kings, we may assume that Boniface must have in a
              manner condoned some of Carl's proceedings on the ground of the necessities of
              the times. It seems that in order to reward his soldiers for some of their
              campaigns on behalf of Christendom Carl took certain treasures and lands which
              belonged to that Church whose interest he had been labouring to defend, thus making the Church, which did not pay the ordinary taxations to
              the state, at any rate contribute out of its own means to the expenses of its
              own safeguarding. Unfortunately the only chroniclers of those times were
              clerics, and many a year after his death jealous priests, nursing a rancour for this act, but willing to forget how this
              conqueror had saved Christianity itself in Europe, have soiled their pens by
              malignity when they might have written glorious things in charity. Carl at least
              had been one of the great historical saviours of
              Christendom, and a saviour of Rome in particular. His
              arm had been mighty and prevailing, and he had never shown any opposing spirit
              to the progress of religion.
               Now the structure
              of Boniface's ecclesiastical organization in Germany had been so recently
              founded that its fate would evidently for the time depend upon the character
              and good-will of Carl's successors in the mayoralty. Indeed the state of the
              empire soon showed not only the necessity of Carl's successors being well
              disposed towards Christianity, but also possessed of firm and powerful hands
              for government and war. Carl Martel had not been long dead when, in the hope of
              recovering independency, a revolt occurred in the province of Bavaria and in
              that of Thuringia to the north of it : provinces where Boniface's labours had been greatest.
               It is necessary
              here that we should carry forward our historical points. First of all it must
              be explained that Carl left three sons. Two of these, Carloman and Pepin le Bref, were by his first wife; the other,
              named Gripho, was by his second. The dynasty under
              which they lived was that of the Merovingian kings. Carl himself had lived and
              died as mayor of the palace to this dynasty, though in the effete state of that
              monarchy he was practically the ruler of the state. It had been Carl's wish
              that each of his sons should govern a portion of the empire. Although they were
              dukes of France, they would still have no titular dignity greater than their
              father's; and, however much they may have despised the reigning dynasty in its
              feeble impotence, they were technically subservient to it. Accordingly they
              adhered to custom, and placed on the Merovingian throne, which happened to be
              vacant, one who was destined to be the last of his race, Childeric III. The
              form was complied with : the actual government remained in their own hands as
              it had done in their father's.
               When Carl's last
              wishes were carried out the arrangement proved displeasing to that division of
              country which fell to the share of Gripho. Perhaps in
              those days of government by constant military repression that might not have
              counted for much if a family feud had not been imported into the matter. This
              came through Duke Odilo of Bavaria, who had, it is
              remembered, invited Boniface to work in his country in 738.
               Odilo had married Carl Martel's runaway daughter Hiltrude, to the vexation of her brothers Carloman and Pepin. Gripho, the
              other brother, sided with Hiltrude, and in return for
              his pains soon found himself a close prisoner in the castle of Neufchateau in the forest of the Ardennes. To the
              satisfaction of the dissatisfied population placed under him, his territory was
              reunited with the rest of the empire; and Pepin, to whom had been assigned
              Neustria and Burgundy, and Carloman, who had
              Austrasia and the land beyond the Rhine, ruled together in harmony. It was well
              they were worthy sons of their father, for they soon had their hands full with
              revolted tribes in Bavaria, Thuringia, and Swabia.
               Now disturbed as
              the country was by revolutions for a short time after Carl Martel's death,
              Boniface and his mission continued to find sympathy and help from the governing
              powers. Indeed, it seems as if his work received even an increase of attention
              and added to its influence.
               On April 21, 742,
              a great state council was convened by Carloman and
              Pepin. It is not known precisely where it was held : some say it was at
              Frankfort; others name Saltz, Ratisbon, and Augsburg.
              The council, at any rate, met at some place in Germany, and was composed of the
              chief temporal and spiritual leaders. It was opened under a decree commencing :
               "I, Carloman, duke and prince of the Franks, with the counsel
              of the servants of God and our great men, have convoked the bishops of my
              kingdom, and Boniface, who is sent from St. Peter, that they may give me
              counsel, &c."
               Boniface, as
              legate of Pope Zachary, presided, and rejoiced he must have been to see matters
              in such progress, since the special object of the council was to definitely put
              down all the confusion and clerical irregularities which had been permitted
              under previous rulers. Writing afterwards to Zachary, Boniface said that
              "For more than eighty years the Franks have neither held a synod nor
              appointed an archbishop, nor enacted or renewed their canons; but most of the
              bishoprics are given to rapacious lawyers or dissolute and avaricious priests
              for their own use; and though some of these profess to be chaste, yet they are
              either drunkards or followers of the chase, or they go armed into battle, and
              shed with their own hands the blood of Christians as well as heathens".
               Certain definite
              questions were raised at this council or synod by Boniface, some of which, by Carloman's help, were carried there and then, while others
              were held over to the synod which was held in the ensuing year. The points that
              were decided were, briefly stated, as follows :
               (1) That annual
              synods should be held in future.
               (2) That the
              property of which the churches and monasteries had been violently deprived
              should be restored.
               (3) That the
              counts and bishops, in their respective jurisdictions, should put down all
              heathen practices.
               (4) That the rule
              of St. Benedict should be reintroduced into the monasteries.
               (5) That the
              clergy should be prohibited from war, the chase, marriage, and the use of
              military accoutrements.
               This synod was of
              such importance in the history of the Romish Church in Germany that there is
              good reason why, even at the risk of seeming to dwell upon it too much, we
              should give some further account of it in Boniface's own words taken from one
              of his letters :
               "In our
              synodal meeting we have declared and decreed that to the end of our life we
              desire to hold the Catholic faith and unity, and submission to the Roman
              Church, Saint Peter, and his vicar ; that we will every year assemble the
              synod; that the metropolitans shall demand the pallium from the see of Rome,
              and that we will canonically follow all the precepts of Saint Peter, to the end
              that we may be reckoned among the number of his sheep, and we have consented
              and subscribed to this profession. I have sent it to the body of Saint Peter,
              prince of the Apostles, and the clergy and the pontiff have joyfully received
              it. If any bishop can correct or reform anything in his diocese let him propose
              the reformation in the synod before the archbishops and all there present, even as we ourselves have promised with oath to the Roman Church.
              Should we see the priests and people breaking the law of God, and we are unable
              to correct them, we will faithfully inform the apostolic see and the vicar of
              Saint Peter in order to accomplish the said reform. It is thus, if I do not deceive
              myself, that all bishops should render an account to the metropolitan, and he
              to the pontiff of Rome, of that which they do not succeed in reforming among
              the people, and thus they will not have the blood of lost souls upon their
              heads".
               Hallam points out
              the special force of the enactment in regard to all metropolitans requesting
              the pallium at the hands of the Pope and promising to obey his lawful commands,
              remarking in the same passage that this was construed by the popes into a
              promise of obedience before receiving the pallium, changed later by Gregory VII
              into an oath of fealty. And he speaks of this council of 742 as claiming
              "a leading place as an epoch in the history of the papacy"
               It is not very
              evident whether it was at this synod, though it certainly was about this time,
              that Boniface had to consider how to deal with certain ecclesiastics and others
              who opposed him. The most prominent were Dortwin, Berthar, Taubrecht, and Hunred, who were active in Thuringia, and Ariowulf, Adelbert, and Clemens,
              who were much the same in Bavaria.
               Adelbert was a French bishop, and, though the precise
              heresy of which he was accused is not very clear, it is believed that he laid
              claim to being inspired and inculcated the worship of angels. He made
              miracle-working one of his pretensions, and sold as relics the clippings of his
              own hair and the parings of his own finger-nails. As for Clement, he was a
              Scotchman who held heterodox opinions on predestination, and taught that Christ
              in His descent into hell delivered all the souls of the damned. Boniface
              stoutly condemned both Adelbert and Clement as
              heretics, and Carloman had them closely imprisoned, a
              sentence that was afterwards confirmed by Pope Zachary.
               The well-known
              case of Virgilius, Bishop of Saltzburg,
              should also be named. Virgilius had devoted himself
              to the study of science, more especially the science of astronomy; and the
              progress he had made in knowledge so far surpassed that of his associates as to
              lead to his being denounced as a sorcerer.
               Whatever we may
              think of Clement and his doctrines, Adelbert, the
              seller of relics from his own precious person, was nothing short of a dangerous
              vagrant, better and safer in prison than out of it. But the case was very
              different with Virgilius, who had not only done good
              missionary work among the Slavs of the mountains of Carinthia and Carinola, but has been called one of the most enlightened
              men of an age in which secular learning was being discountenanced. It is
              perhaps not to be expected that Boniface's work would be prosecuted on lines at
              all times parallel in every branch with the most enlightened knowledge of his
              time; but it is at least sad to see him, with the Pope of Rome at his back,
              either ignorantly or tyrannically condemning one who sought for truth in science.
              It is a narrow policy, which many have adopted since Boniface's day, always
              unwisely, because sure to raise an opposition inspired in the end by defiance,
              mockery, and contempt. It was when he was exasperated by Boniface's ignorant
              action into this spirit that Virgilius scornfully
              turned from his studies in science and asked him whether the senseless form
              made use of by a German priest, uneducated in the Latin tongue, was efficacious
              : 'Baptizo te in nomine Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti.' "Yes", was Boniface's
              answer, "for faith ought to be blind"
               The only excuse we
              can accept for Boniface, who was a man of great learning and resource for his
              time, is his great wish to bring all into subservience to Rome, and his
              character, which was that of a strict disciplinarian. The great aims that
              possessed his soul, next to the conversion of the heathen, seem to have been
              the founding in unity of the Kingdom of God upon earth; the bringing of all men
              in universal brotherhood under the care of one shepherd, the Pope, Christ's
              vicar upon earth; and to overcome not only the opposition of individuals, but
              even the diversity of nations and languages, by rendering the Latin tongue the
              language of the Universal Church. Perhaps his scheme was a visionary and impossible
              one : it certainly scarcely seems as if the method of over-riding the
              difficulties with which the scheme was beset was a workable one : but it was
              born of an enthusiasm which occasionally, as in the case of Virgilius,
              overflowed into the limits of what was regrettable, even should we allow it to
              have been excusable.
               The next great
              event for Boniface was the Synod of Lessines held in the following year, 743.
              Lessines, formerly called Leptines, is on the left
              bank of the river Dender, in the province of Hennegau, about five miles north of Ath.
              At this town, chiefly known now for its breweries and its porphyry quarries,
              there was a palace of the Merovingian kings, easily accessible from Tournai,
              which lies twenty miles to the westward, and which was long the chief town of
              the Salian Franks. At this palace in Lessines the synod of 743 was held under
              the presidency of Boniface, but under the authority of Pepin and Carloman. The regulation of the clergy and the arrival at a
              settled understanding in regard to the Church property secularized by
              Carl Martel may be said to have been the objects of this synod. Pepin and Carloman gave the following order in reference to the
              latter subject :
               "We enact by
              the counsel of God's servants and of the Christian people, that in
              consideration of impending wars and the persecutions to which we are exposed
              from surrounding nations, we be allowed, by the indulgence of God, to retain
              for some time, sub precario et censu, a portion of the Church's property for the
              support of our army; on these conditions, that a sol should be
              paid annually to the church or monastery for every estate, and that the church
              be reinvested with its property at the death of its present holder. Should,
              however, necessity compel or the prince ordain it, the precarium (or
              life-interest) must be renewed, and a new document drawn up; and, in every
              case, care must be taken that the churches and monasteries of which the
              property is in precario (granted for
              a single life) suffer no want or poverty. But if poverty renders it necessary
              the whole property must be restored to the church or house of God".
               This was as far as
              could be got at present, a settlement of the old complaint that had descended
              from Carl Martel's day. It established ecclesiastical rights to property, the
              admission of which was of importance to the Church. Until such property was
              finally restored to the Church, Church and State had each to concede something
              to the other. Meanwhile, so dependent did the mission and the Church seem upon
              the sword of the government, it was but natural that Boniface should not at the
              moment be too exacting in regard to arrangements about temporal property.
               The reform of the
              clergy was the other object of the Synod of Lessines. The bishops, priests, and
              clerks were all required to promise to alter their habits and to conduct
              themselves according to the ancient canons. The monks accepted the rule of St.
              Benedict. Obedience to the Pope was promised. The metropolitan was to hold a
              yearly council in future, and every bishop must visit his diocese once a year.
              Bishops who could not correct or control their priests were to carry the matter
              to the archbishops.
               Thus, mainly by
              the sagacity of Boniface, affairs were gradually passing from a state of chaos
              into one bordering upon discipline and stability, and the Synod of Lessines is
              not without historical importance, because it definitely marks a stage in this
              progress.
               It is interesting
              at this juncture to look round and observe the singularly difficult and
              delicate course the tide of events was taking. The Church in Germany was being
              steadily brought under the shepherding of Rome, acknowledging Rome's
              ecclesiastical government and her supremacy. The civil powers were helping to
              establish this. Yet the Pope himself, struggling for his temporal existence,
              and with a sword of Damocles, in the shape of Luitprand and his Langobards,
              hanging ever over his head, was dependent on Pepin and Carloman for his preservation. The situation must have taxed all Boniface's diplomatic
              skill; but, leaving further developments to time, though keeping a watchful eye
              upon them, he quietly continued the administration of the ecclesiastical
              affairs for which he was responsible.
               Hitherto Boniface,
              an archbishop as well as a legate, had been without a see. This was now no
              longer an arrangement likely to be of service. In 744, on the death of Bishop Reginfried, occasion was taken to appoint him to the see of
              Cologne. This appointment proved to be only a temporary one.
               At Mayence the incumbent of the bishopric was one Gervilius or Gewlieb, a man very
              little after Boniface's mind. He had not been chosen on account of any personal
              or ecclesiastical fitness for the office, but was much more interested in wild
              sport as a hunter. He had also been guilty of shedding man s blood in battle.
              It will be remembered that at the Germanic council of 742, the clergy were
              forbidden under the seal of Carloman and Pepin to
              engage in war or the chase. Gervilius was summoned
              before a council held in Germany, convoked by Carloman on the advice of Boniface; and, having been found guilty, he was deposed.
               As Boniface found
              that Mayence would be a better centre for his work than Cologne, he removed there and erected the see of Mayence into an archbishopric, thus placing himself
              officially at the head of the Church in Germany. This was in 745. Pope Zachary
              expressed his ready approval, and made Mayence the
              ruler over the sees of Tongres,
              Cologne, Worms, Spires, Utrecht, Strasburg, Augsburg, Constance, Coire, and all
              other bishoprics which Boniface established. A glance at the map of Germany
              will show what a large area this brought under his jurisdiction. We must note
              that this is the time at which the special link between Boniface and Mayence was formed, and that, although some other
              arch-episcopates were created within the district as time went on, the primacy
              that has always been allotted to Mayence dates from
              this period.
               To many men the
              height that Boniface had now attained would have opened up a field amply
              satisfying to their worldly ambitions. He had in his reach wealth, honour, power, and the society and support of the powerful
              men of the land. It shows how pure and lofty were the motives guiding his life
              and aims when Boniface regarded all these things as of secondary value to the
              faithful prosecution of his mission. The old fiery zeal that drew him from Nutscelle and England was still his guiding star, and in
              following it still he remained not only true but single-hearted. We shall see
              that it carried him forward to the utmost earthly limit.
               The years were
              slipping away each one, however, leaving its work accomplished. We come now to
              the year 744, and Boniface has turned three-score without showing any
              falling-off of energy. The annual synod, which was held this time at Soissons,
              did not deal with matters of great importance, although the heresy of Adelbert, referred to at the Germanic council of 742, was
              more definitely condemned. The matter need not detain us in view of a more
              interesting and personal matter connected with Boniface which took place in the
              same year. This was the foundation of the monastery of Fulda. Upon Fulda,
              destined in the not-far-distant end to receive his mortal remains, he bestowed
              great and devoted care.
               The founding of
              Fulda was undertaken to satisfy the desire of a young priest whom Boniface had
              educated and afterwards attached to his own person. This priest, now known as
              St. Sturm, was placed under the guardianship of Boniface by his parents on an
              occasion when he visited Bavaria. Boniface had him educated in the monastery of
              St. Peter at Fritzlar, and after ordination kept him
              for three years engaged in assisting himself as a kind of bishop's chaplain.
              Sturm greatly preferred the retirement of the monastic life, and Boniface did
              not oppose him. After some time spent in exploration Sturm chose, as suitable
              for a monastery, a spot on the banks of the Fulda which we easily identify to
              this day as the town of Fulda, situated fifty-four miles south-east of Cassel.
              At that time the whole district was nothing more than a wild and extensive
              forest. There was no difficulty in obtaining a sufficient grant of land from
              Pepin. Encouraged and helped by Boniface, Sturm set to work to erect the
              monastery, and on its completion he was appointed abbot with seven monks under
              him. The foundation of this monastery, as has been said, seems to have excited
              Boniface's special interest, so much so that he made it exempt from any
              interference of reigning bishops, its abbot being responsible to the Pope
              alone. It will be necessary to come back to Fulda in connexion with the burial of Boniface, but it may be remarked here that Fulda rose to
              great importance in subsequent years. With the exception of a short break,
              Sturm ruled at Fulda till he died at an advanced age in 779 (710-779); and so
              greatly did the monastery prosper in his lifetime that, before his death, the
              number of monks rose to 400 It held its importance until the Reformation .
               During the next
              two years Boniface busied himself still further in founding monasteries, and to
              the year 746 are ascribed the foundations of Wurtzburg in Franconia, Buraburg in Hesse, and Erfurt in
              Thuringia. These were valuable additions to those previously established at Fritzlar, Ordofe, Hamenburg, and elsewhere. They were all placed under the
              same discipline of the Benedictine rule, as was the case in regard to all
              monasteries in the West, monks and nuns being thereby bound by the wholesome
              regulation not to be idle, but to work as well as pray.
               The requirements
              for carrying on these new undertakings were considerable, and led Boniface to
              try and find fresh helpers. It was naturally to England that he turned once
              more, where, no doubt, his successes in his great mission continued to impress
              many willing and kindred souls. We read of several who answered his call, and
              recognize many names that have not to shine by a borrowed light, but survive by
              their own lustre. Among the men were Witta, Wigbert, Wunnibald, Burchard (made Bishop of Wurtzburg),
              Willibald of Eichstadt, and Lullus; and among nuns
              there were Thecla, Walburge, Bertigita, Chunigrat, Chunigild, Contruda, and his own cousin Lioba.
               The arrival of so
              many bright and fresh workers would be very refreshing to Boniface, and no
              doubt enabled him the better to bear a fresh loss which death now inflicted
              upon him. The old friend who had done so much to help him, at first personally
              as his bishop, and afterwards with advice as his friend, Daniel of Winchester,
              who had sent him books and assistance and much practical sympathy, died at this
              time. According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Daniel had resigned his see in
              744 to Hunferth, after holding it for forty-two
              years, and died in 745. Roger of Wendover gives the date of his death as the
              following year, 746. Apart from his relations with Boniface, Daniel remains an
              interesting personality in the history of Winchester, being the first bishop to
              rule over that diocese after the separation from it of the see of Sherburne.
               So far, however,
              from the death of Daniel in any way lessening Boniface's interest in his native
              country and its concerns, we have at this very time vigorous evidence that he
              was not only watching affairs there, but ready to act in a very decided and
              disciplinary manner in regard to them. The proof of this is to be found in the
              well-known letter written by him about this very time to Ethelbald,
              King of the Mercians. Peaceful though Ethelbald's long reign was, there were several serious abuses against which Boniface raised
              his pen in a letter which it required faithfulness and courage to write to a
              reigning prince.
               The letter is
              addressed "To Ethelbald, my dearest lord, and to
              be preferred to all other kings of the Angles, in the love of Christ, Boniface
              the archbishop, legate to Germany from the Church of Rome, wisheth perpetual health in Christ". It is not necessary to quote the whole of
              this long epistle, which is full of loud remonstrances upon Ethelbald's immoral mode of life, and ends with a stirring exhortation to better things. It
              closes as follows :
               "Wherefore,
              my beloved son, we entreat with paternal and fervent prayers that you would not
              despise the counsel of your fathers, who, for the love of God, anxiously appeal
              to your highness. For nothing is more salutary to a good king than the willing
              correction of such crimes when they are pointed out to him; since Solomon says,
              "Whoso loveth instruction, loveth wisdom". Wherefore, my dearest son,
              showing you good counsel, we call you to witness, and entreat you by the living
              God and His Son Jesus Christ, and by the Holy Spirit, that you would recollect how
              fleeting is the present life, how short and momentary is the delight of the
              filthy flesh, and how ignominious for a person of transitory existence to leave
              a bad example to posterity. Begin, therefore, to regulate your life by better
              habits, and correct the past errors of your youth, that you may have praise
              before men here, and be blest with eternal glory hereafter".
               There is no
              mincing of matters here. It is improbable that the royalty of our century would
              be accessible to such a letter if it were called for, or if any
                one could be found to write it. Its words recall some of the spoken
              words of John Knox in more recent times for their boldness and plainness. But Ethelbald took it in good part. He found that Cuthbert, the
              Archbishop of Canterbury, had also received a strong letter in which Boniface
              threatened to report him to the Pope unless he restrained his clergy and nuns
              in the fineness and vanity of their dress; and lest he should be accused of
              interfering with what did not concern him, Boniface assured Cuthbert that
              Gregory III had laid him under oath to keep him acquainted with ecclesiastical
              conduct among the nations in his vicinity. Ethelbald and Cuthbert accordingly called a synod for dealing with the matters referred
              to. It was held at Cloveshou, and Ethelbald's sincerity was proved by his freeing monasteries and churches from most public
              taxes, and the granting of certain liberties and privileges to the clergy.
              Boniface's work and influence were thus of value away from his own diocese and neighbourhood. Certainly the closing sentences of the
              letter we have seen he wrote to Cuthbert should have passed on an enthusiasm.
              "Let us fight for the Lord in these days of bitterness and
              affliction", he urged. "If this be the will of God, let us die for
              the holy laws of our fathers, that we may arrive with them at the eternal
              inheritance. Let us not be dumb dogs, sleeping sentinels, hirelings that fly at
              the sight of the wolf; but watchful and diligent pastors, preaching to the
              great and small, to every age and condition, being instant in season and out of
              season".
                
                   VII
               It amounts to an
              epoch when an European dynasty that has wielded the sceptre for three hundred years comes at last to its fall. Such an event would in any
              case be deeply impressed on the pages of history. Humanity would see to it that
              the depth of the record depended not only on the political importance of the
              fact, but quite as much upon whether men regarded the downfall with sadness, as
              of a loss, or with joy, as of a deliverance. Now the earliest Merovingians were
              mighty men of valour, men of strong, vigorous
              personality, to whom a nation could consent to concede its government. But the
              later sovereigns of the line had become utterly feeble and dissolute, mere
              degenerate and debauched puppets, an offence in the sight of God, and
              contemptible in the sight of man. No wonder, then, that their time had arrived,
              and that a powerful hand was being raised to sweep relentlessly away these
              cumberers of the ground. Pepin was to be the agent, but Boniface's relations to
              the circumstances, if not those of active and open assistance, were yet
              sufficiently close to give us an interest in now considering them.
               It will be
              remembered that when affairs finally settled down after Carl Martel's death he
              was succeeded in the mayoralty by his sons Pepin and Carloman,
              and they brought forward Childeric III to occupy the vacant Merovingian throne
              in 742. The nation had long ceased to expect much from a sovereign of this
              line. Eginhard says : "The Merovingians no
              longer showed anything illustrious but the title of king. The prince contented
              himself with wearing flowing locks and a long beard, and seating himself upon
              the throne to represent a monarch. He gave audience to ambassadors, and made
              them the replies which were taught or rather commanded to him. With the
              exception of an alimentary pension, not very certain, and regulated by the
              pleasure of the mayor of the palace, he only possessed a single house where he
              held his court, composed of a very small number of domestics. If it was
              necessary he should go anywhere, he travelled in a chariot drawn by oxen, which
              a driver conducted country fashion. It was thus that he went to the general
              assembly of the nation, which met once a year for national purposes".
               Childeric III
              proved to be as effete as his immediate predecessors; he was despised for his
              sloth, and was surnamed "the stupid". The nation had begun to realize
              that its monarchs had passed beyond all toleration. On the other hand, a
              succession of powerful mayors of the palace, like Pepin of Heristal,
              Carl Martel, and now Pepin le Bref and Carloman, had taught the Franks how great an advantage it
              would be to have energy and capacity at the head of the state.
               In the year 747 Carloman expressed his wish to hand over his office to Pepin,
              and to enter upon a monastic life. Many reasons are assigned for Carloman’s action. It is said that he had a mind naturally
              contemplative and much bent on religious meditation. He seems to have come
              under the special influence of Boniface, who helped him to . wean his heart
              from worldly things, encouraging him to follow the example of certain
              English-Saxon kings who, having abandoned thrones, retired into the monasteries
              of Rome. Above all, Carloman had been touched by the
              simple and earnest purity of Boniface himself. Pepin does not seem to have
              opposed Carloman’s wish, and the latter went to Rome,
              and was received there by Pope Zachary. We need not pursue further his
              career than merely to say that he embraced a Benedictine life, and died at
              Vienne in 755.
               We come now to the
              fact that in 747 Pepin was left alone in the mayoralty with Childeric III on
              his hands, and with an empire ripe for a change of dynasty. But that empire was
              in many parts held loosely together, and perhaps this is why Pepin preferred strengthening
              his movements by imparting into them such moral or religious influence as he
              could bring to bear. Accordingly his first step was to lay the situation before
              the Pope. It is thought by some that Boniface was too timorous a man to mix
              himself actively up in such grave questions. This is possible enough, yet it is
              certain that such advice or guidance as he could give would have been in
              support of an appeal to Rome, and as one of the messengers eventually
              dispatched was his bishop and fellow countryman, Burchard of Wurtzburg, Boniface must have known what was in progress.
               In 750 or 751,
              then, Pope Zachary received an embassy from Pepin, consisting of the Bishop of Wurtzburg, the Abbot of St. Denys, and Pepin's own
              chaplain. They submitted to him the now famous question : "Is it expedient
              that one who was possessed of no authority in the land should continue to
              retain the name of king, or should it be transferred to him who really
              exercised the royal power?". Zachary was equal to the occasion, and with a
              shrewdness largely born of his fear of the hovering Langobards, and a trust
              that Pepin would bring him succour, he gave to the
              embassy the now celebrated answer : "that he who really governed should
              also bear the royal name".
               There was very
              little time lost after the return of the messengers from Rome. In the same year
              (750-751) a general state assembly was convened at Soissons, where the popular
              voice pronounced itself in favour of a change of
              dynasty. And so, with the consent of state and church, Childeric, the last of
              the long-haired race of Merovingian kings, was dethroned; his locks, the sign
              of his royalty, were shorn, and he was sent to the cloister of Sithieu, or of St. Bertin, near
              St. Omer, where he died three years afterwards. One might apply to the
              circumstances a passage from one of George Eliot's letters in reference to a
              recent king : "Certainly decayed monarchs should be pensioned off; we
              should have a hospital for them, or a sort of zoological garden, where these
              worn-out humbugs may be preserved. It is but justice that we should keep them
              since we have spoilt them for any honest trade. Let them sit on soft cushions
              and have their dinner regularly, but for Heaven's sake preserve me from
              sentimentalizing over a pampered old man when the earth has its millions of
              unfed souls and bodies"
               The Merovingian
              dynasty was gone for ever, and the Carolingian now
              reigned in its stead. There has been some slight discussion about it, but historians
              very generally state that it was Boniface's hand that on this, the first
              occasion, crowned Pepin on behalf of the Pope.
               What an impressive
              scene it must have been. Soissons, the chief stronghold of the Suessones in Caesar's time, had been made the capital of
              the Franks nearly three centuries previously by Clovis, the founder of the
              Merovingian line, while he was yet a heathen king. It saw on this day the deposition
              of the last of his race, by a quiet revolution upheld by the Christian Church
              of the time, and the crowning of the succeeding monarch. Boniface's part in
              this ceremony has been freely commented upon by writers. His action, under the
              Pope, is noted strongly by Eginhard, who speaks of
              Childeric having been deposed 'iussu', and Pepin
              crowned 'auctoritate Pontifices Romani'. His
              coronation of Pepin at all is reckoned as an epoch in the history of the
              interference of the Church in such affairs, for as Lanfrey says, "ainsi fut donnée la première couronne que la main d'un pape ait posée sur le front d'un ambitieux". His use of the
              holy oil in the act of coronation, which was an application of the ancient
              Hebrew custom, is dealt with by Gibbon in sarcastic language : "The royal
              unction of the kings of Israel was dexterously applied, the successor of St.
              Peter assumed the character of a divine ambassador; and a German chieftain was
              transformed into the Lord's anointed". Be all this as it may, Boniface had
              much to congratulate himself upon, and as Carl Martel's friend, and as a guide
              and something of a director to Pepin, as well as from the aspect of Pope's Legate
              and representative, he had much cause for rejoicing. It was no small thing for
              him to be prominently concerned in planting on a throne this mighty man just at
              the time when the Pope's own seat was in danger, and likely to need the help of
              just such a powerful arm.
               Boniface was well
              aware of the anxiety in Rome. Our old acquaintance Luitprand, whom Carl Martel
              had pacified towards the Pope, had been dead for some time. After a short
              seven-months' reign by Hildebrand, the Langobard throne was now occupied by Ratchis, who assumed the offensive towards Rome. Pope
              Zachary had an interview with Ratchis and smoothed
              things over; perhaps, indeed, his personal influence effected too much, for Ratchis was so struck with Zachary that he abdicated and
              turned monk. Haistulph, often called Astolphus, who
              followed him, only waited three years and then marched against Rome. Zachary
              was no better off than before, and he seems to have become heartbroken, for he
              died at this juncture (March 14, 752), a few months after having authorized
              Boniface to crown Pepin. He had for successor one whom some name Stephen II,
              others Stephen III, and this pontiff managed for the moment to stave off Haistulph by going to his court at Pavia. Not feeling
              secure, however, Stephen proceeded from Pavia by Mont St. Bernard, over the
              Alps to Pontigne, where Pepin was living. It was now
              well into the winter of 753-4. The Pope and his clergy abased themselves before
              Pepin and besought his aid. Finding the Franks very deferential, Stephen's
              hopes were raised, and when Pepin saw the respect which his people showed
              Stephen, he even thought it well to ask Stephen as a favour to crown him again with his own pontifical hand.
               As regards help
              against Haistulph, none could be undertaken while the
              winter rendered the Alps impassable. Accordingly Stephen went into the
              monastery of St. Denis at Paris to await the spring.
               This was Pepin's
              opportunity. What had been done in the first instance by Boniface was now again
              repeated throughout by Stephen, who poured over the heads of Pepin and his wife Bertrade the blessed oil which was afterwards
              considered miraculous. The day was July 28, 754. It is not apparent whether
              Boniface was present; probably it was not so, for from Paris to Mainz is a long
              distance. But as far as he was able, by pen or otherwise, he was sure to urge
              Pepin to accept the aegis of the Pope's support, and, in return, to give him
              the help he required at Rome.
               But Boniface had
              become possessed with other thoughts. He was now turned seventy years old, and
              as he felt his days shortening, his mind reverted to his early missionary
              intentions towards Frisia in particular, and his
              reflections seem to have filled him with doubts as to whether he had not
              allowed himself to be diverted from the people to whom he considered himself
              divinely called. His enthusiasm was lit up again, and he resolved to betake
              himself to Frisia, there to preach, and, if need be,
              there to risk his life for Christianity.
               While Zachary was
              still alive, Boniface applied to him for relief from some of his official
              burdens by having France placed under a special legate. To this Zachary was not favourable, and perhaps preferring that he who was to
              succeed Boniface should receive from Boniface some course of personal training,
              permission was given to select a successor. Boniface did not do so while
              Zachary still lived, but in 754, the very year that Pope Stephen was with
              Pepin, he fixed upon Lullus. Lullus was an Englishman, and had been brought up as
              a monk at Malmesbury before going out as one of Boniface's helpers; and he had
              proved himself a very faithful worker and preacher. Boniface wrote to Fuldrad, Abbot of St. Denis, and begged him to obtain
              Pepin's consent to the succession, taking also the opportunity to go rather
              fully into the circumstances of the time.
               "Nearly all
              my companions", said the letter, "are strangers in this land. Some
              are priests distributed in various places to celebrate the offices of the
              Church and minister to the people. Some are monks living in different
              monasteries, and engaged in teaching the young. Some are aged men, who have
              long borne with me the heat and burden of the day. For all these I am full of
              anxiety lest, after my death, they should be scattered as sheep having no
              shepherd. Let them have a share of your countenance and protection, that they
              may not be dispersed abroad, and that the people dwelling on the heathen
              borders may not lose the law of Christ. Suffer also Lullus,
              my son and coadjutor, to preside over the churches, that both priests and
              people may find in him a teacher and a guide; and may God grant that he may
              prove a faithful pastor to the flock. I have many reasons for making these
              requests. My clergy on the heathen borders are in deep poverty. Bread they can
              obtain for themselves, but clothing they cannot find here unless they receive
              aid from some other quarter to enable them to persevere and endure their
              hardships. Let me know, either by the bearers of this letter, or under thine
              own hand, whether thou canst promise the granting of my request, that, whether
              I live or die, I may have some assurance for the future"
               Pepin's consent to
              the appointment of Lullus, and the Pope's also, were
              duly granted to Boniface, and the aged archbishop at once proceeded to denude
              himself of the duties of his see, and to induct and ordain Lullus in his place. "For myself", said he, "I must start betimes, for
              the day of my departure is at hand. For this final departure I have long
              wished; get everything ready for me, and particularly take heed to place in the
              chest which holds my books the shroud in which my body shall presently be
              wrapped" .
               Fulda, one might
              have thought, would have tempted him to a retirement into a life of quiet and
              repose, but his freedom had not been sought in order to spend his closing years
              in quiet meditation and preparation. He was setting out on a journey. But much as
              he loved Fulda, he contented himself with commending its completion and
              protection to Lullus, and exacting from him a promise
              that when the time should come it should receive his remains.
               With these
              instructions as parting words, spoken to hearers whose eyes were streaming with
              tears, Boniface handed Mainz and all his episcopal responsibilities over to Lullus, and, this over, he hurried forward his preparations
              to enable him to start on his self-imposed mission in the briefest possible
              time. In a few days he had gathered together those selected for the journey,
              and they took ship and sailed away down the Rhine.
               This was in the
              spring of 755, while Stephen and Pepin were arranging their enterprise for the
              military protection of Rome. Pepin had summoned a state council at a place
              named Bernacum (Braine), between Soissons and
              Cambrai, at which the Pope's injuries were exposed to a devout and warlike
              nation, and he repassed the Alps, not as a suppliant but as a conqueror, at the
              head of a French army which was led by the king in person. Haistulph took to flight, and was glad to make peace with the ambassadors who reached
              him. We need not pursue this historical situation further, for even up to the
              securing of this peace it was not granted to Boniface to be spared, and it is
              to be feared his last days were to some degree clouded by doubts and fears for
              the head of the Church.
               As companions on
              his voyage Boniface had taken with him followers to the number of about fifty.
              There were three priests, Wintrung, Walter, and Adelhere; certain deacons, including Hamunt, Strichald, and Bosa; Waccar, Gunderhar, Williker, and Hadolph, monks; with nearly forty laymen.
               To how many of the
              thousands of Englishmen who sail over this historic river, flanked with the
              same hills and valleys, is it known that a great fellow countryman of theirs
              wound a dangerous course over the same Rhine on a missionary errand nearly
              twelve centuries ago? The grim ruins and bare castles that fascinate the eye
              today are half-way down the ages that have rolled by since the little
              expedition on which our minds are now engaged sped its way. The boats are
              piloted along and swept with the current onwards towards the sea, past
              forest-crowned hills and winding valleys, past the half-way distance where the
              Moselle joins the Rhine, onwards till the Rhine itself divides into what we now
              call the old Rhine and the Vecht. At this point,
              where stands as the modern Utrecht the ancient Traiectum ad Rhenum, they pause. For
              here they are to join Bishop Eoban, successor to old
              Bishop Willibrord, whose body lay resting in peace at
              the monastery of Epternac. It was fitting that in his
              last missionary journey Boniface should receive from the cathedral of Utrecht a
              renewal of the zealous spirit which had first been infused into his early
              manhood by Willibrord's labours.
              We can imagine how all the old enthusiasm would return,
               And kindle like a
              fire new stirred
               At mention of his
              name.'
               Welcoming Eoban to his company, the little band rapidly continued its
              way into the Frisian country. Nearly forty years before, his foot had first
              been set in this land in the turbulent days of Radbod.
              Now, under Pepin's rule and the restoration of some approach to ecclesiastical
              order, religious enterprise seemed to stand a better chance. To some extent
              this was true, but in a generation there is not time for traditions of the old
              and a hostile attitude to the new to be safely effaced. Nor could the peaceful
              Christian religion be accepted without the people feeling a constant
              apprehension of a return of the grip of that military power under whose
              protection its propagation had, in times gone by, been at all possible.
               The labours of the mission began in East Frisia,
              and made good progress. The workers pushed on and came to the banks of a river
              not far from Leewarden, known then as the Bordne or Burdo. Here, in the neighbourhood of a village named Dorkhum,
              the number of converts was very great, and tents were erected. A large number
              of these converts had been baptized, and it was arranged that on a certain day
              the neophytes should receive the rite of confirmation. This day was to be June
              5, 755 .
               When the morning
              broke, a multitude was seen approaching the tents of the mission. As they came
              nearer and rushed onwards they were soon found to be far different from the
              peaceful and faithful company who were expected. Brandishing swords and spears,
              and dashing forward with warlike shouts, they proclaimed the bloodthirsty
              errand on which they came. Boniface, hearing the tumult, came out of his tent,
              and the little Christian band rallied round him, making ready to fight for
              their lives. But Boniface felt that the close of his work and his anticipated
              and desired end were at hand. The martyr's crown was about to be earned, and he
              was ready to be offered.
               Steadied,
              pacified, encouraged, his followers stood fast. With an elevated faith and a
              resolution not of this world only, they nerved themselves for the martyr's
              death. The infuriated pagans, whose rage was increased by a fanatical outburst
              at the overthrow of their ancient gods, swept over the little group and put
              them all to the sword. Boniface, holding over his head a large book, received
              through it a thrust from a sword, and fell with a mortal wound. Not one of the
              Christian band escaped.
               'Groans rise
              unheard; the dying cry,
               And death and
              agony,
               Are trodden under
              foot by yon mad throng
               Who follow close'
               The murderers now
              commenced a work of pillage. Scattering upon the field the books and relics,
              they sought for gold and silver. This they failed to find, and coming only on
              the small store of sacramental wine, they were so maddened by it, and by their
              discomfiture, that they broke into two factions in their quarrelsomeness and
              furiously turned upon one another. Meanwhile the Christian neophytes expected
              for confirmation began to collect; and their courage increasing as they viewed
              the faction fight, they surrounded the pagans and dispatched the survivors.
               The bodies of most
              of the martyred band were buried on the field of Dorkhum where they lay. Those of Boniface and some few others were reverently carried
              across the country and allowed to lie in state for some days at Utrecht. The
              ground on which the martyrdom had taken place was carefully searched, and the
              books and other remnants of what the enemies had scattered to the winds were
              gathered together. Three books are to be seen in the public library at Fulda,
              treasured as the most remarkable manuscripts of the library, and stated to have
              belonged to Boniface. One is a small one, a pocket copy of the Gospels, said to
              be in the handwriting of Boniface himself; another is the celebrated Harmony of
              the Gospels, known as the Codex Fuldensis,
              written in Anglo-Saxon; while the third, the largest of all, is alleged to be
              the identical volume with which, in the impulse of the moment, Boniface tried
              to protect his head against the pagan murderer. This book has numerous cuts,
              said to have been made by the sword, and there are brown stains on the pages
              shown as the blood of the saint. 
               It may well be
              imagined how great was the consternation that overspread Germany at the violent
              death inflicted by heathen Frisians upon a Christian mission with such a
              well-known ecclesiastical figure at its head. All could see that the fanatical
              perpetrators of the deed merely represented the spirit which still possessed a
              large number of the barbarous inhabitants of Frisia.
              A religious mission is always open to danger on political grounds, for the
              attitude of the natives is too often, even in our time, swayed by a dread that
              the mission, ostensibly one of religious peace and goodwill, is in reality the
              thin edge of a political enterprise which is intended to rob them of their
              country and their independence. Indeed, when the leader of the mission is one
              whose name has figured in civil affairs, this fear is more than excusable, and
              the apprehensions that are aroused lead to the party being beset with jealous
              and hostile eyes a smouldering fire. Behind all this,
              in the present instance, were the fanatical superstitions of an old religion,
              idolatrous, mystical, and cruel, its priests incensed by the preaching against
              their rites, and by Boniface's vigorous demolition of the objects of their
              worship. Political dread fanned by fanatical fury gave flame to the fire, and
              the result was the murder of the entire party.
               The consternation
              spread beyond the limits of Germany, and gave a shock to the whole of western
              Christianity. It was especially felt in England, where the work of Willibrord and Boniface in Friesland had been followed with
              a lively interest. There were not wanting men ready at once to brave the
              dangers and continue the work, and in the person of Willihad of Northumbria, and many others, the chain of English missionaries was still
              further lengthened. One test of a great man is his power to excite in others an
              enthusiasm for his work; in Boniface we find another instance of this, for his
              life and example lit up the celestial fire in other souls who carried forward
              the lamp of life after the martyr's hand had laid it down.
               When Lullus, the Archbishop of Mayence,
              heard that Boniface was dead, and that his remains were lying at Utrecht, he
              remembered the solemn promise Boniface had exacted from him, that Fulda should
              be his burying-place. Without loss of time Lullus sent messengers to bring the body to Mayence. This
              was not done without considerable opposition from Utrecht, the prefect of the
              city even forbidding it by an edict. The removal of this opposition is said to
              have been effected by certain miraculous signs, convenient for the purpose at
              any rate, and the departure having been permitted, the messengers arrived at Mayence with Boniface's body about a month after his death.
              A short rest followed, and then with due solemnity
              the body was taken in a boat across the Rhine on its way to the abbey of Fulda.
              Singing psalms and hymns, the whole river covered with a sympathetic
              procession of boats, Lullus and the clergy conveyed
              their burden to the opposite side of the river. From thence they commenced
              their journey of about eighty miles across the country. Wherever they rested on
              their pilgrimage, the place was marked with a cross. At last they received
              their welcome at Fulda, and completed their task by laying to rest there the
              remains of the martyred Boniface.
               The date of the
              martyrdom of Boniface was June 5, 755. If, then, he was born in 684, his age
              was seventy-one. Sometimes, as in Butler's Lives of the Saints, the age is
              given as seventy-five, but this difference is due to uncertainty whether
              Boniface was born in 680 or 684. It does not affect the year of his death. In
              later years Boniface was canonized at Rome, and although his saint's day is not
              now kept by the English Church, it still has its place in the English calendar.
                
                   
 POPES DURING THE PERIOD (Haydn)684. Benedict II.685. John V.686. Conon.687. Sergius.701. John VI.705. John VII.708. Sisinnius.708. Constantine.715. St. Gregory II.731. Gregory III.741. St. Zacharias.752. Stephen II (died before consecration)752. Stephen II or III.757. Paul I.
 
 BIBLIOGRAPHYBeattie, W., M. D. : The Danube Illustrated.Bede : Ecclesiastical History.Benham : Dictionary of Religion.Butler : Lives of the Saints.Turner, Sharon : History of the Anglo-Saxons.Cox, G. W. : Life of St. Boniface.Duruy, V. : History of FranceFreeman : Old English History.Geoffrey of MonmouthGreen : Making of England.Guizot : History of Civilization.Hallam : History of the Middle Ages.Browne, G. F. (George Forrest), St. Aldhelm: his life and timesLane : Illustrated Notes of Church History.Maclear : Apostles of Mediaeval Europe.Menzel : History of GermanyMilman, Dean : History of Latin Christianity.Ockley : History of the SaracensWillibald : Life of St. Boniface.
 
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