January
8.
S. SEVERINUS OF NORICUM
(A.D 482.)
Patron
of Austria, Vienna, Bavaria.
IN the middle of the fifth century the province of Noricum (Austria,
as we should now call it), was the very highway of invading barbarians, the
centre of the human Maelstrom, in which Huns, Allemanni, Rugii, and a dozen
wild tribes more, wrestled up and down, and round the starving and beleaguered
towns of what had once been a happy and fertile province, each tribe striving
to trample the other under foot, and to march southward, over their corpses,
to plunder what was still left of the already plundered wealth of Italy and
Rome. The difference of race, of tongue, and of manners, between the
conquered and their conquerors, was made more painful by difference in creed.
The conquering Germans and Huns were either Arians or heathens. The conquered
race (though probably of very mixed blood), who called themselves Romans,
because they spoke Latin, and lived under the Roman law, were orthodox
Catholics; and the miseries of religious persecution were too often added to
the usual miseries of invasion.
It was about the year 455-60. Attila, the great King of the Huns, who
called himself—and who was—"the Scourge of God," was just dead.
His empire had broken up. The whole centre of Europe was in a state of
anarchy and war ; and the hapless Romans along the Danube were in the last
extremity of terror, not knowing by what fresh invader their crops would be
swept off up to the very gates of the walled towers, which were their only defence; when there appeared among them,
coming out of the East, a man of God.
Who
he was he would not tell. His speech showed him to be an African Roman—a
fellow-countryman of S. Augustine—probably from the neighborhood of Carthage. He
had certainly at one time gone to some desert in the East, zealous to learn
"the more perfect life." Severinus, he said, was his name; a name
which indicated high rank, as did the manners and the scholarship of him who
bore it. But more than his name he would not tell. "If you take me for a
runaway slave," he said, smiling, "get ready money to redeem me with
when my master demands me back." For he believed that they would have need
of him; that God had sent him into that land that he might be of use to its
wretched people. And certainly he could have come into the neighbourhood of
Vienna, at that moment, for no other purpose than to do good, unless he came to
deal in slaves.
He
settled first at a town, called by his biographer Casturis; and, lodging with
the warden of the church, lived quietly the hermit life. Meanwhile the German
tribes were prowling round the town; and Severinus, going one day into the church,
began to warn the priests and clergy, and all the people, that a destruction
was coming on them which they could only avert by prayer, and fasting, and the
works of mercy. They laughed him to scorn, confiding in their lofty Roman
walls, which the invaders—wild horsemen, who had no military engines—were
unable either to scale or batter down. Severinus left the town at once,
prophesying, it was said, the very day and hour of its fall. He went on to the
next town, which was then closely garrisoned by a barbarian force, and repeated
his warning there: but while the people were listening to him, there came an
old man to the gate, and told them how Casturis had been already sacked, as the
man of God had foretold; and going into the church, threw himself at the feet of S. Severinus, and said that he had
been saved by his merits from being destroyed with his fellow-townsmen.
Then
the dwellers in the town hearkened to the man of God, and gave themselves up to
fasting, and almsgiving, and prayer for three whole days.
And
on the third day, when the solemnity of the evening sacrifice was fulfilled, a
sudden earthquake happened, and the barbarians, seized with panic fear, and
probably hating and dreading—like all those wild tribes—confinement between
four stone walls, instead of the free open life of the tent and the stockade,
forced the Romans to open their gates to them, rushed out into the night, and,
in their madness, slew each other.
In
those days a famine fell upon the people of Vienna; and they, as their sole
remedy, thought good to send for the man of God from the neighbouring town. He
went, and preached to them, too, repentance and almsgiving. The rich, it seems,
had hidden up their stores of corn, and left the poor to starve. At least S.
Severinus discovered (by divine revelation, it was supposed), that a widow
named Procula had done as much. He called her out into the midst of the people,
and asked her why she, a noble woman and free-born, had made herself a slave to
avarice, which is idolatry. If she would not give her corn to Christ's poor,
let her throw it into the Danube to feed the fish, for any gain from it she
would not have. Procula was abashed, and served out her hoards thereupon
willingly to the poor; and a little while afterwards, to the astonishment of
all, vessels came down the Danube laden with every kind of merchandize. They
had been frozen up for many days near Passau, in the thick ice of the river
Enns: but the prayers of God's servant had opened the ice-gates, and let them
down the stream before the usual time.
Then the wild German horsemen swept around the walls, and carried off
human beings and cattle, as many as they could find. Severinus, like some old
Hebrew prophet, did not shrink from advising hard blows, where hard blows could
avail. Mamertinus, the tribune, or officer in command, told him that he had so
few soldiers, and those so ill-armed, that he dare not face the enemy.
Severinus answered that they should get weapons from the barbarians themselves; the Lord would fight for them, and they should hold their peace: only if
they took any captives they should bring them safe to him. At the second
milestone from the city they came upon the plunderers, who fled at once,
leaving their arms behind. Thus was the prophecy of the man of God fulfilled.
The Romans brought the captives back to him unharmed. He loosed their bonds,
gave them food and drink, and let them go. But they were to tell their comrades
that, if ever they came near that spot again, celestial vengeance would fall on
them, for the God of the Christians fought from heaven in his servants cause.
So
the barbarians trembled, and went away. And the fear of S. Severinus fell on
all the Goths, heretic Arians though they were; and on the Rugii, who held the
north bank of the Danube in those evil days. S. Severinus, meanwhile, went out
of Vienna, and built himself a cell at a place called "At the
Vineyards." But some benevolent impulse—divine revelation his biographer
calls it—prompted him to return, and build himself a cell on a hill close to
Vienna, round which other cells soon grew up, tenanted by his disciples.
"There," says his biographer, " he longed to escape the crowds
of men who were wont to come to him, and cling closer to God in continual
prayer: but the more he longed to dwell in solitude, the more often he was
warned by revelations not to deny his presence to the afflicted people." He fasted
continually; he went barefoot even in the midst of winter, which was so severe, the story continues, in those
days around Vienna, that waggons crossed the Danube on the solid ice: and yet,
instead of being puffed-up by his own virtues, he set an example of humility to
all, and bade them with tears to pray for him, that the Saviour's gifts to him
might not heap condemnation on his head.
Over
the wild Rugii S. Severinus seems to have acquired unbounded influence. Their
king, Flaccitheus, used to pour out his sorrows to him, and tell him how the
princes of the Goths would surely slay him; for when he had asked leave of him
to pass on into Italy, he would not let him go. But S. Severinus prophesied to
him that the Goths would do him no harm. Only one warning he must take:
"Let it not grieve him to ask peace even for the least of men."
The
friendship which had thus begun between the barbarian king and the cultivated
Saint was carried on by his son Feva: but his "deadly and noxious
wife," Gisa, who appears to have been a fierce Arian, always, says his biographer,
kept him back from clemency. One story of Gisa's misdeeds is so characteristic
both of the manners of the time and of the style in which the original
biography is written, that I shall take leave to insert it at length.
"The
King Feletheus (who is also Feva), the son of the afore-mentioned Flaccitheus,
following his father's devotion, began, at the commencement of his reign, often
to visit the holy man. His deadly and noxious wife, named Gisa, always kept him
back from the remedies of clemency. For she, among the other plague-spots of
her iniquity, even tried to have certain Catholics re-baptized: but when her
husband did not consent, on account of his reverence for S. Severinus, she
gave up immediately her sacrilegious intention, burdening the Romans,
nevertheless, with hard conditions, and commanding some of them to be exiled to
the Danube.
For when one day, she, having come to the village next to Vienna, had
ordered some of them to be sent over the Danube, and condemned to the most
menial offices of slavery, the man of God sent to her, and begged that they might
be let go. But she, blazing up in a flame of fury, ordered the harshest of
answers to be returned. 'I pray thee,' she said, 'servant of God, hiding there
within thy cell, allow us to settle what we choose about our own slaves.' But
the man of God hearing this, "trust", he said, "in my Lord Jesus Christ, that she
will be forced by necessity to fulfil that which in her wicked will she has
despised". And forthwith a swift rebuke followed, and brought low the soul of
the arrogant woman. For she had confined in close custody certain barbarian
goldsmiths, that they might make regal ornaments. To them the son of the aforesaid
king, Frederick by name, still a little boy, had gone in, in childish levity,
on the very day on which the queen had despised the servant of God. The
goldsmiths put a sword to the child's breast, saying, that if any one attempted
to enter, without giving them an oath that they should be protected, he should
die; and that they would slay the king's child first, and themselves
afterwards, seeing that they had no hope of life left, being worn out with long
prison. When she heard that, the cruel and impious queen, rending her garments
for grief, cried out, "0 servant of God, Severinus, are the injuries which I did
thee thus avenged? Hast thou obtained, by the earnest prayer thou hast poured
out, this punishment for my contempt, that thou shouldst avenge it on my own
flesh and blood?" Then, running up and down with manifold contrition and
miserable lamentation, she confessed that for the act of contempt which she had
committed against the servant of God she was struck by the vengeance of the present
blow; and forthwith she sent knights to ask for forgiveness, and sent across
the river the
Romans, his prayers for whom she had despised. The goldsmiths, having
received immediately a promise of safety, and giving up the child, were in like
manner let go.
"The most reverend Severinus, when he heard this, gave boundless thanks to the
Creator, who sometimes puts off the prayers of suppliants for this end, that as
faith, hope, and charity grow, while lesser things are sought, He may concede
greater things. Lastly, this did the mercy of the Omnipotent Saviour work, that
while it brought to slavery a woman free, but cruel over much, she was forced
to restore to liberty those who were enslaved. This having been marvellously
gained, the queen hastened with her husband to the servant of God, and showed
him her son, who, she confessed, had been freed from the verge of death by his prayers,
and promised that she would never go against his commands."
To
this period of Severinus' life belongs the famous story of his interview with
Odoacer, the first barbarian king of Italy, and brother of the great Onulf or
Wolf, who was the founder of the family of the Guelphs, Counts of Altorf, and
the direct ancestors of Victoria, Queen of England. Their father was Edecon,
secretary at one time of Attila, and chief of the little tribe of Turklings,
who, though German, had clung faithfully to Attila's sons, and came to ruin at
the great battle of Netad, when the empire of the Huns broke up at once and for
ever. Then Odoacer and his brother started over the Alps to seek their fortunes
in Italy, and take service, after the fashion of young German adventurers, with
the Romans; and they came to S. Severinus' cell, and went in, heathens as they
probably were, to ask a blessing of the holy man; and Odoacer had to stoop and
to stand stooping, so huge he was. The Saint saw that he was no common lad, and
said, "Go to Italy, clothed though thou be in ragged sheepskins : thou
shalt soon give greater gifts
to thy friends." So Odoacer went up into Italy, deposed the last of
the Caesars, a paltry boy, Romulus Augustulus by name, and found himself, to
his own astonishment, and that of all the world, the first German king of Italy; and, when he was at the height of his power, he remembered the prophecy of
Severinus, and sent to him, offering him any boon he chose to ask. But all that
the Saint asked was, that he should forgive some Romans whom he had banished. S.
Severinus meanwhile foresaw that Odoacer's kingdom would not last, as he seems
to have foreseen many things. For when certain German knights were boasting
before him of the power and glory of Odoacer, he said that it would last some
thirteen, or at most fourteen years; and the prophecy (so all men said in
those days) came exactly true.
There
is no need to follow the details of S. Severinus's labours through some
five-and-twenty years of perpetual self-sacrifice—and, as far as this world was
concerned, perpetual disaster. Eugippius's chapters are little save a catalogue
of towns sacked one after the other, from Passau to Vienna, till the miserable
survivors of the war seemed to have concentrated themselves under S.
Severinus's guardianship in the latter city. We find, too, tales of famine, of
locust-swarms, of little victories over the barbarians, which do not arrest
wholesale defeat: but we find, through all, S. Severinus labouring like a true
man of God, conciliating the invading chiefs, redeeming captives, procuring for
the cities which were still standing supplies of clothes for the fugitives,
persuading the husbandmen, seemingly through large districts, to give even in
time of dearth a tithe of their produce to the poor —a tale of noble work
indeed.
Lugippius
relates many wonders in his life of S. Severinus. The reader finds how the man
who had secretly celebrated a heathen sacrifice was discovered by S. Severinus,
while the tapers of the rest of the congregation were lighted miraculously
from heaven, his taper alone would not light. He records how the Danube dared
not rise above the mark of the cross which S. Severinus had cut upon the posts
of a timber chapel; how a poor man, going out to drive the locusts off his little
patch of corn instead of staying in the church all day to pray, found the next
morning that his crop alone had been eaten, while all the fields around
remained untouched. Also he records the well-known story, which has a certain
awfulness about it, how S. Severinus watched all night by the bier of the dead
priest Silvinus, and ere the morning dawned bade him, in the name of God, speak
to his brethren; and how the dead man opened his eyes, and Severinus asked him
whether he wished to return to life, and he answered complainingly, "Keep
me no longer here; nor cheat me of that perpetual rest which I had already
found," and so, closing his eyes once more, was still for ever.
At
last the noble life wore itself out. For two years Severinus had foretold that
his end was near; and foretold, too, that the people for whom he had spent
himself should go forth in safety, as Israel out of Egypt, and find a refuge in
some other Roman province, leaving behind them so utter a solitude, that the
barbarians, in their search for the hidden treasures of the civilization which
they had exterminated, should dig up the very graves of the dead. Only, when
the Lord willed to deliver them, they must carry away his bones with them, as
the children of Israel carried the bones of Joseph.
Then Severinus sent for Feva, the Rugian king and Gisa, his cruel wife;
and when he had warned them how they must render an account to God for the
people committed to their charge, he stretched his hand out to the bosom of the
king. "Gisa," he asked, " dost thou love most the soul within that
breast, or gold and silver?" She answered that she loved her husband above all. "Cease then," he said,
"to oppress the innocent: lest their affliction be the ruin of your
power."
Severinus'
presage was strangely fulfilled. Feva had handed over the city of Vienna to his
brother Frederick"poor and impious," says Eugippius. Severinus, who
knew him well, sent for him, and warned him that he himself was going to the
Lord; and that if, after his death, Frederick dared touch aught of the
substance of the poor and the captive, the wrath of God would fall on him. In
vain the barbarian pretended indignant innocence; Severinus sent him away with
fresh warnings.
"Then
on the nones of January he was smitten slightly with a pain in the side. And
when that had continued for three days, at midnight he bade the brethren come
to him." He renewed his talk about the coming emigration, and entreated
again that his bones might not be left behind; and having bidden all in turn
come near and kiss him, and having received the most Holy Sacrament, he
forbade them to weep for him, and commanded them to sing a psalm. They hesitated,
weeping. He himself gave out the psalm, "Praise the Lord in His saints,
and let all that hath breath praise the Lord ;" and so went to rest in the
Lord.
No sooner was he dead than Frederick seized on the garments kept in the
monastery for the use of the poor, and even commanded his men to carry off the
vessels of the altar. Then followed a scene characteristic of the time. The steward
sent to do the deed shrank from the crime of sacrilege. A knight, Anicianus by
name, went in his stead, and took the vessels of the altar. But his conscience
was too strong for him. Trembling and delirium fell on him, and he fled away to
a lonely island, and became a hermit there. Frederick, impenitent, swept away
all in the monastery, leaving nought but the bare walls, " which he could
not carry over the Danube." But on him, too, vengeance fell. Within a month
he was slain by his own nephew. Then Odoacer attacked the Rugii, and carried
off Feva and Gisa captive to Rome. And then the long-promised emigration came. Odoacer,
whether from mere policy (for he was trying to establish a half-Roman kingdom
in Italy,) or for love of S. Severinus himself, sent his brother Onulf to fetch
away into Italy the miserable remnant of the Danubian provincials, to be
distributed among the wasted and unpeopled farms of Italy. And with them went
forth the corpse of S. Severinus, undecayed, though he had been six years dead,
and giving forth exceeding fragance, though (says Eugippius) no embalmer's
hand had touched it. In a coffin, which had been long prepared for it, it was
laid on a waggon, and went over the Alps into Italy, working (according to
Eugippius) the usual miracles on the way, till it found a resting-place near
Naples, in that very villa of Lucullus at Misenum, to which Odoacer had sent
the last Emperor of Rome to dream his ignoble life away in helpless luxury.
So
ends this tragic story. Of its truth there can be no doubt. M. Ozanam has well
said of that death-bed scene between the saint and the barbarian king and
queen—"The history of invasions has many a pathetic scene: but I know none
more instructive than the dying agony of that old Roman expiring between two
barbarians, and less touched with the ruin of the empire, than with the peril
of their souls." But even more instructive, and more tragic also, is the
strange coincidence that the wonder-working corpse of the starved and
bare-footed hermit should rest beside the last Emperor of Rome. It is the
symbol of a new era. The kings of this world have been judged and cast out. The
empire of the flesh is to perish, and the empire of the spirit to conquer
thenceforth for evermore.
S.
FRODOBERT OF TROYES.
(7TH
CENT.)
S.
FRODOBERT, the son of parents of the middle class, from the earliest age was
inspired with the love of God, and a wondrous gentleness and child-like
simplicity. He is said, as a little boy, to have healed his mother of
blindness, as, in a paroxysm of love and compassion for her affliction, he kissed
her darkened eyes, and signed them with the cross. At an early age he entered
the abbey of Luxeuil, where his singleness of soul and guilelessness exposed
him to become the butt of the more frivolous monks. During the time that
he was there, a certain Teudolin, abbot of S. Seguanus, was staying at
Luxeuil for the purpose of study, and Frodobert was much with him, being
ordered to attend on the wants of the visitor, and obey him implicitly. This
Teudolin diversified his labours with playing practical jokes on his gentle assistant; but Frodobert never resented any jest. One day the abbot Teudolin sent
Frodobert to another monk, who was also fond of practising jokes on Frodobert,
for a pair of compasses, saying that he wanted them for writing. The lay
brother took the message without in the least knowing what compasses were. The
monk, suspecting that the abbot had sent Frodobert on a fool's errand, put a
pair of stones off a hand-mill round his neck, and told him to take them to Teudolin.
Frodobert obeyed, but was scarcely able to stagger along the cloister under the
weight. On his way, the abbot of Luxeuil, his own superior, met him, and amazed
to see the poor brother bowed to earth under this burden, bade him throw down
the mill-stones, and tell him whither he was taking them. Frodobert obeyed, and
said that the abbot Teudolin had sent him for them, as he wanted them for
literary purposes. The superior burst into tears, grieved that the good,
simple-minded lay brother should have been thus imposed upon, and hastening to
the visitor, and then to the monk who had put the " compasses "about
Frodobert's neck, he administered to them such a sharp rebuke, that from that
day forward no more practical jokes were played upon him.
As
years passed, his virtue became more generally known, and the Bishop of Troyes
summoned him to be in attendance on himself. The humble monk in vain entreated
to be allowed to return to his monastery ; the bishop retained him about his
person in his palace.
As
he was unable to return to the quiet of his cloister, Frodobert withdrew as
much as possible from the world which he moved, into the calm of his own heart, and practised great abstinence in the midst of the abundance wherewith the bishop's table was supplied. Living outside his cloister, he kept its rules, and in Lent he never ate anything till after sunset. Those who were less strict in their living, sneered at his self-denial, and told the bishop that Frodobert kept a supply of victuals in his bedroom, and ate privily. To prove him, the prelate gave him a chamber in the church tower, and burst in upon him at all unseasonable moments, but was never able to detect the slightest proof of the charge being well founded. He, therefore, regretted his mistrust, and restored the monk to his room in the palace.
Frodobert was given at last, by Clovis II, some marshy land near Troyes, and on this he built a monastery, which he called La Celle, which was soon filled with numerous monks, and became famous for the learned men it educated. Here S. Frodobert spent many years. He passed his declining years in building a church to S. Peter, and when the church was completed, his strength failed, and he knew that he had not many days to live. His great desire was to see it consecrated on the feast of the Nativity, and he sent two of his monks to the bishop to beseech him to dedicate his new church that day. But the duties of Christmas, in his Cathedral, rendered it impossible for the prelate to grant this request. Frodobert received the refusal with many tears, but lifting his eyes and hands to heaven, he prayed, and God prolonged his days, so that he survived to see his church consecrated on the Octave of the Nativity, Jan. 1st; and when the ceremony was over, he resigned his soul into the hands of God. The body was translated, some years after, on the 8th January. The weather had been wet, and the marshes were under water, so that the abbot and monks were in trouble, because their house was surrounded with the flood, and it would be difficult for the bishop and clergy of Troyes
to attend the ceremony of the translation. "Grant," said the abbot,
"that the blessed Frodobert may obtain for us a sharp frost, or we shall
have no one here tomorrow." This was said on the eve of the projected
translation. That night, so hard a frost set in, that by morning the whole
surface of the water was frozen like a stone, and the bishop, clergy, and
faithful of Troyes, came to the monastery over the ice.
S.
GUDULA
(ABOUT
712.)
Patroness of Brussels.
THE date of the birth of this holy virgin is uncertain. During the reign
of King Dagobert, or of his son Sigebert, there lived in Brabant a count named
Witgere. His wife Amalberga, who is said to have been the sister of Pepin of
Landen, presented him with many children; Rainilda, Phraildis, and Emebert,
who occupied the episcopal throne of Cambrai, and was afterwards elevated to
the ranks of the blessed. Amalberga was again pregnant, and an angel announced
to her, in a dream, that the child that should be born to her, would be a model
of sanctity. A few days after, S. Gudula was born, and her relative, S.
Gertrude, was her sponsor, and took charge of her education.
When Gudula was still a child, she longed to fly the world. She and her
sister Rainilda betook themselves to Lobbes, and asked to be admitted into the
monastery. But as women were not permitted to invade its precincts, their
request was denied. After waiting three days at the gates, Gudula turned away
sorrowful, but her sister Rainilda, more persevering, remained undeterred by
repeated refusals, till, overcoming by her persistency, she was allowed to
live under the rule of the monastery. Gudula returned to her parents; but
living at home, she lived a recluse. In those wild times of civil war and
general violence, it is not surprising to see gentle spirits flutter like doves
to the convent gates, as to an ark of refuge, from the storms raging without,
which they were so powerless to withstand.
About
two miles from her parents' castle was a little village named Moorsel, where
was an oratory dedicated to the Saviour; thither went S. Gudula every morning
at cock-crow. And now follows an incident similar to that related of S.
Genoveva. One wild night, the Prince of the Power of the air extinguished the
light which the servant girl carried before the Saint; and she, in profound
darkness, on a barren heath, knew not how to find the path. Gudula knelt down
and prayed to God, and the light rekindled in her lantern, so that she went on
her way rejoicing.
At
early mass, one frosty morning, the priest, as he turned towards the people,
noticed Gudula wrapped in devotion, and her feet were exposed from beneath her
gown; he saw with dismay that there were no soles to her shoes, so that
though she appeared to be well shod, she in reality walked barefoot. The good
priest, pained to think that her tender feet should be chilled by the icy
stones of the pavement, as soon as he had unvested, took his warm mittens, and
put them under the feet of the young countess; but she rejected them, much
distressed that her act of penance had been discovered. On leaving the church, she met a poor woman, with her
crippled dumb son on her back. The boy was bowed double, and was so deformed
that he could not feed himself. The Saint looked at the poor mother and then at
the unfortunate child, and actuated by a movement of compassion, she took the
cripple into her arms, and besought God to pity him. Instantly the stiff joints
became supple, and the back was straightened, and the child, feeling himself whole,
cried out: "See, mother see I" Gudula, abashed at the miracle,
implored the poor woman to keep what had taken place a secret; but she, full
of gratitude, published it abroad. When S. Gudula died, all the people followed
her body to the grave. She was buried on the 8th January, 712, according to the
general opinion, in a tomb before the door of the oratory of the village of
Hamme, near Releghem. On the morrow, a poplar that stood at the foot of her
grave was seen, in spite of the season, to have burst into green leaf.'
The
body was afterwards transported to Nivelles, Mons, and Maubeuge, through fear
of the Normans; and then was laid in the oratory of Moorsel, which she had
loved so well in life. When Charlemagne came to Moorsel, he built there a monastery,
richly endowed; but the convent disappeared in the times of anarchy which
followed the death of the founder, and the body was finally taken from the
robber baron who had appropriated to himself the lands of Moorsel, and brought
to Brussels; where, since 1047, a magnificent church has eternalized the
memory of the daughter of Witgere. The site of the chapel at Hamme is now a
kiln.
Relics,
at the church of SS. Michel et Gudule, Brussels.
In
art, represented with a lantern, and an angel kindling it.