<h2><SPAN name="APPENDIX" id="APPENDIX"></SPAN>APPENDIX</h2>
<h3><SPAN name="St._Ignatius_and_his_work" id="St._Ignatius_and_his_work"></SPAN>ST. IGNATIUS AND HIS WORK FOR EDUCATION</h3>
<p><span class="sc">In</span> the kingdom of Navarre, in the north of Spain, among those
mountains whence the armorers of Toledo drew their metal and forged
for the world their trenchant steel, in a region where the generous,
passionate, valiant people seemed to have formed their character on
the austere grandeur of nature itself, St. Ignatius was born.</p>
<p>The world represents him as a man of few and stern words, in
appearance severe and dark, and yet a man in whom intellect is ever
prominent, but intellect elevated by the grandeur of a soul of
chivalry and by an exquisite delicacy of charity—this was the real
character <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></SPAN></span>of St. Ignatius. This will be seen in the brief glimpse
given of his life and his spirit of charity, his absorbing love for
souls, in his work of founding missions, his greatness of mind and
heart, in the work originated by him, and carried on by his followers,
in the cause of higher education.</p>
<p>His character stands prominently on the horizon of history. He cannot
be ignored, nor is his existence or his work ignored.</p>
<p>His enemies have not passed him by without notice, and his friends,
the friends of God, have rejoiced that, as God sent him forth to teach
and produce fruit that the fruit might remain, the fruit has remained.</p>
<p>St. Ignatius sends his voice down the centuries as a great
individuality. He has spoken as a man of God, as a man of ideas, a man
of energy. He has made his influence felt throughout the universe,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></SPAN></span>not only in the civilized world, but in the uncivilized portion, to
bring it into civilization, or to bear to it the advantages of
civilization.</p>
<p>Other great men have spoken and have sent forth their influence.
Theirs has been a message to the civilized world; it has been limited
to one point of view. It has been prowess on the battlefield or on the
seas, work in the ship of state or in the fields of science. But
Ignatius has not been limited to any one of these. He is the founder
of a Religious Order that has sent pioneers into all these fields and
forests of valor or research; he is the writer of the Spiritual
Exercises that have won a fame gained by but few authors; he is the
father of many saints; he is the educator of generations; he is the
inspirer of scientific, literary, theological, philosophical
investigation, and the promoter of discoverers and of pioneer
missionaries in the Old and the New World.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Ignatius was born, in 1491, at the château of Loyola, and at fifteen
years of age he was a page in the court of King Ferdinand, and then a
soldier under the Duke of Navarre, his relative. The army of Francis I
penetrated into Navarre, and, at the siege of Pampeluna, Ignatius,
Captain of Infantry, was wounded by a cannon ball. His life is given
in the preceding pages.</p>
<p>I shall refer only briefly to it, and to his conversion. He was a
young knight fond of gayety and feats of arms, and for some time after
he received the wound he was confined to his bed while his broken leg
was set; and while awaiting his slow recovery he read the lives of the
saints and of Christ, as these were the books given to him in place of
the novels he had asked for, as no others were in the house.</p>
<p>In reading the lives of the saints his heart was touched. His eyes
were opened to the vanity of life and the reality of <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></SPAN></span>eternity
compared with the worldliness of the life he had been leading.
Inspired with enthusiasm at the lives of the saints, he said, "What
they have done, I can do." The event of his life proved the
earnestness of his purpose.</p>
<p>He resolved to undertake a life of penance and self-denial, and, while
occupied with these holy resolutions, he wrote in a book the principal
events of the life of Christ and His glorious Mother. It was at this
time that Our Lord sent him a vision to strengthen and console him. He
beheld one night, as he was holding his vigils, the glorious Queen of
the angels, who appeared to him holding in her arms her Blessed Son,
enlightening him with the splendor of glory and charming him by her
sweet presence.</p>
<p>To her he ascribes the inspiration of the Spiritual Exercises, and his
Order, imitating its founder, has shown the most <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></SPAN></span>unbounded affection
and devoted filial love toward the Virgin Mother of Christ.</p>
<hr class="short" />
<p>At Alcala St. Ignatius studied, and there won for the Society of
Jesus, Laynez, Salmeron, and Babadilla. He afterward founded there a
college where Vasquez, Suarez, and St. Francis Borgia expounded the
Holy Scriptures. St. Ignatius sent Father de Torres to Salamanca to
found the famous college where the illustrious professors, Cardinal de
Lugo, Francis Suarez, Maldonatus, Gregory of Valencia, Francis Ribera,
and many other illustrious men were professors.</p>
<hr class="short" />
<p>At the University of Paris, in 1534, on the 14th of March, St.
Ignatius received the degree of Master of Arts and Doctor of
Philosophy, having received the degree of Bachelor of Arts two years
before. The University of Paris had the honor of having as pupils St.
Ignatius, St. Francis<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></SPAN></span> Xavier, Peter Faber, Claude le Jay, Simon
Rodriguez, John Codura, Paschasius, Brouet, Martin Olave, all honored
with the academic degree.</p>
<hr class="short" />
<p>Among the earlier colleges founded by St. Ignatius were the
following:—</p>
<p>In 1542 the College of Coimbra, in Portugal, arose. In 1546 St.
Francis Borgia founded the College of Gandia. In 1556 the College of
Ingolstadt was founded. In 1552 a college was founded at Vienna, and
in 1556 one at Prague. In 1553 the Roman College was fully founded.
And in 1568 the colleges at Lima, Peru.</p>
<hr class="short" />
<p>The German College founded in Rome by St. Ignatius produced many
remarkable men.</p>
<p>From it came 1 pope, Gregory XV, 24 cardinals, 6 electors of the
Empire, 19 princes, 21 archbishops, 121 titular bishops, 100 bishops
in <i>partibus infidelium</i>,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></SPAN></span> 6 abbots or generals of religious orders,
11 martyrs of faith, 13 martyrs of charity, and 55 others, conspicuous
for piety and learning.</p>
<p>This was at the end of the eighteenth century. In our own time in one
classroom Father Cardella counted seventeen different orders of all
different nationalities present at the lectures of theology in the
Roman College.</p>
<hr class="short" />
<p>The Roman College was the type of the Jesuit College. It was begun by
Francis Borgia, in 1551, at the foot of the Capitol in Rome, with
fourteen members of the Order and Father John Peltier, a Frenchman, as
Superior.</p>
<p>The professors taught rhetoric and three languages,—Hebrew, Greek,
and Latin. There were present there at a given time 2107 students, 300
in theology. The most eminent professors filled the chairs:
theologians like Suarez <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></SPAN></span>and Vasquez; commentators such as Cornelius à
Lapide and Maldonatus; founders of national history schools, as
Mariana and Pallavicini; Clavius, reformer of the Gregorian Calendar;
Kircher, universal in the exact sciences, while the other colleges
throughout the world remained provided with their own required forces
and maintained their own prestige.</p>
<hr class="short" />
<p>From this college came forth distinguished men in every line of
intellectual life, and general eminence, men of elevated thought and
of noble and generous minds. In particular three characters
came—young men that were to fill with admiration of their greatness
the succeeding century.</p>
<p>Stanislaus Kostka, a Polish noble who died at seventeen years of age;
Aloysius Gonzaga, an Italian prince of twenty-three; and John
Berchmans, a Flemish townsman of twenty-two.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Among some of the famous men educated by the Jesuits we find Bossuet,
Corneille, Molière, Tasso, Fontenelle, Diderot, Voltaire, and
Bourdaloue, himself a Jesuit.</p>
<hr class="short" />
<p>When Père Porée replied to the remark that he was not one of the great
poets, he said, "At least you may grant that I have been able to make
some of them." A few others were Descartes, Buffon, Justus Lipsius,
Muratori the historian, Calderon, and Vico, the author of "Ideas of
History," Richelieu, Tilly, Malesherbes, Don John of Austria,
Luxembourg, Esterhazy, Choiseul, St. Francis de Sales, Lambertini,
afterward Benedict XIV, the most learned of the popes, and the present
Pontiff, Pope Leo XIII, renowned for his learning and wisdom.</p>
<p>Nearly all the Jesuit writers had been Jesuit professors, with almost
no exception, and nearly all had taught humanities, <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></SPAN></span>belles-lettres,
and rhetoric. Father Southwell in 1676 numbers 2240 authors, and
Father de Backer in 1876 counts 11,100.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="Authors" id="Authors"></SPAN>AUTHORS</h3>
<p>We find some remarkable authors among the Jesuit writers. Foremost
come the Bollandists, renowned throughout the world for their
monumental work, the "Acta Sanctorum." Similar gigantic works were
carried on by Fathers de Backer, Sommervogel, and Pachtler. In the
various branches of learning we need mention a few of the greater
writers.</p>
<p>In astronomy, we find Ricci, Perry, De Vico, Secchi, Curley, Sestini.</p>
<p>In mathematics, Hagen, Algué.</p>
<p>In naval tactics, "The Jesuit's Book."</p>
<p>In archæology, Garucci, Marchi, the master of De Rossi.</p>
<p>In Oriental languages, Strassmaier, Harvas, Maas, Van den Gheyn.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>In theology, Suarez, Vasquez, Toletus, Maldonatus, Franzelin.</p>
<p>In philosophy, Cominbricenses, Liberatore.</p>
<p>In moral philosophy, Busenbaum, Gury, Toledo, Ballerini, Layman,
Lehmkuhl, Genicot.</p>
<p>In asceticism, Alvarez de Paz, Gaudier, Rodriguez, Scaramelli, Grou.</p>
<p>The Spiritual Exercises comprise a whole library. Father Watragan has
written a work merely to record the editions and commentaries on these
Exercises.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="Education_Plan" id="Education_Plan"></SPAN>THE EDUCATIONAL PLAN OF ST. IGNATIUS</h3>
<p>St. Ignatius had gathered about him a body of picked men. The Roman
College, the type of colleges of Jesuit education, would have for its
professors only those who had been doctors of the University of
Paris.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The outline of the course of education was given by St. Ignatius. It
was completed and developed by Aquaviva. The work was still more
perfected by Father Laynez, of whom it is said,—</p>
<p>"St. Ignatius praised him not only on account of other great merits,
but particularly for devising and arranging the system of colleges."</p>
<p>As to the number of students found under a unified method of thorough
teaching, it will be interesting to take them in review.</p>
<p>In Rome in 1584, the twenty colleges attending classes in the Roman
College numbered 2108 students, in Poland there were 10,000 young men
chiefly of the nobility, at Rome 2000, at La Flèche 1700. In the
seventeenth century at the College of Louis le Grand, in Paris, the
number varied between 2000 and 3000. In 1627 the Province of Paris had
in fourteen colleges 13,195 students.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The papal seminaries under Gregory XIII, at Vienna, Dillengen, Fulda,
Prague, Grätz, Olmütz, Wilna, as well as in Japan, were directed by
the Fathers, as also that of Pius V and of St. Charles Borromeo at
Milan.</p>
<p>Taking an average, there were more than two hundred thousand students
being educated in these educational institutions.</p>
<p>A comparison could be made on this basis of the work done by the Order
and that which is accomplished by Oxford.</p>
<p>If Oxford spends annually a revenue of $2,500,000 to supply facilities
for higher education to two thousand of the nobility and gentry, how
much would be required to educate a quarter of a million
students,—not two thousand, but two hundred and fifty thousand?</p>
<p>The fundamental principles in the educational institute of St.
Ignatius were these:—</p>
<p>First, solidity and thoroughness.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The first condition of all higher studies as well as of lower studies
was such that, as St. Ignatius said, "It was useless to begin at the
top, as the edifice without a good foundation would never stand."</p>
<p>Let literature and philosophy be gone through with satisfactorily, and
then theology may be approached.</p>
<p>Literature must come first of all. St. Ignatius provides for law and
medicine, but by professors of law and medicine outside of the Order;
but no professors of the Order were sent for work outside of Jesuit
institutions. If the younger men were sent abroad, the younger
generation would be deprived of that type; and if eminent men were
sent forth without a permanent Jesuit College, the work would not be
that of the Order, but of scattered individuals, and would soon
perish.</p>
<p>In the cause of education St. Ignatius had placed in his charter the
watchwords "Defence and Advance." As a leader of <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></SPAN></span>a military type he
had gathered about him the flower of youth and of mature age, from
college and university, from doctor's chair and prince's throne, and
in fifteen years from the foundation of the Order left one hundred
colleges and houses in Portugal, Spain, Italy, Sicily, Germany,
France, Brazil, and the East Indies. Xavier traveled from India and
Ceylon, in the west, to Malucca, Japan, and the coast of China on the
east. Wherever the energy and activity of Apostolic zeal penetrated it
was with the purpose, and usually the result, of permanent Apostolic
work in the foundation of educational institutions. Father de Backer
says,—</p>
<p>"Wherever a Jesuit set his foot, wherever there was founded a house, a
college, a mission, there too came apostles of another class, who
labored, who taught, who wrote."</p>
<p>This is true even to our day where in the Rocky Mountains, beside the
mission <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></SPAN></span>house of Spokane Falls, rises the Jesuit College of Spokane.</p>
<p>Sixty years later than the time of St. Ignatius there were 272
colleges, and in 150 years the collegiate and university houses of
education numbered 769.</p>
<p>"Looking at these seven hundred institutions of secondary and superior
education," says Father Thomas Hughes in his work on Loyola, "in their
scope of legislative executive power we find they were not so much a
plurality of institutions as a single one.</p>
<p>"If we look at the 92 colleges in France, although the University of
Paris was in one quarter of the city, and in that sense materially
one,—although including 50 colleges,—yet in the formal and essential
bond these 92 Jesuit colleges were vastly more of a unit as an
identical educational power than any faculty existing. No faculty at
Paris, Rome, Salamanca, or Oxford ever preserved the control over <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></SPAN></span>its
50, 20, or 8 colleges that each Provincial exercised over his 10, 20,
or 30 colleges, or the general of the Order over the 700 colleges,
with 22,126 members in the Order."</p>
<p>At the present day we find the Jesuit colleges in almost every part of
the known world. In Rome and in China, in South Africa and North
America, in the Philippine Islands as well as in Ceylon and Egypt, in
Australia and Cuba, as well as in Syria and the city of New York.</p>
<p>We may glance briefly at the colleges scattered over the world,
containing to-day 52,692 Jesuit pupils.</p>
<p>This is a larger number than those taught at Oxford and Cambridge and
Glasgow and Harvard or Yale or Princeton or in Paris and Edinburgh.</p>
<p>In the Jesuit College at Rome there are 2082 students.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Thus the total number of students—studying with professors of the
Society of Jesus under one university system in all parts of the known
world—is 52,692.</p>
<p>There has been no going back. Fifty years ago, when the groundwork of
rebuilding the 700 institutions that had been destroyed by the
suppression had to be commenced all over again, there were but 15,000,
to-day there are 52,692.</p>
<p>St. Ignatius was born in 1491. The first College of Coimbra was
founded in 1542. From 1542 to 1773 is a period of 231 years. The
suppression lasted from 1773 to 1814 (41 years). The new work
continued from 1814 to 1899, a period of 85 years.</p>
<p>Among the colleges founded in the chief cities of the world are Loyola
College, at Loyola in Spain; St. Omer's College, in Belgium, the link
between Europe and America; Stonyhurst College, in England; Clongoes
Wood, Ireland; Mangalore, in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></SPAN></span> India, the only first-grade college in
the district; Melbourne, Australia; St. Ignatius College, California,
the pioneer of Pacific coast missions and of the Rocky Mountains; at
Kansas City the only boarding college in the far West; St. Ignatius,
at Cleveland, Ohio, one of the latest Western colleges; Spring Hill
College, at Mobile, Alabama; Georgetown College, at Washington, D.C.;
Holy Cross College, at Worcester, Massachusetts; St. John's College,
at Fordham, New York; St. Francis Xavier's College, in New York City.</p>
<p>In the proportion mentioned above, in the same period (that is, a
period of 231 years), there will be in the Jesuit colleges 263,690
pupils.</p>
<p>St. Ignatius died July 31, 1556. He was sixty-five years of age. At
the age of thirty he hung up his sword at Montserrat, and, with ready
mind and heart and pen, in thirty-five years he achieved the gigantic
work of the founding and <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></SPAN></span>developing the Order. The educational work
was projected and advanced in a brief period of fifteen years, from
1542 to 1556.</p>
<p>He was a man of prudence and deliberation, and of unswerving decision.</p>
<p>Vigilant and patient, whenever he appeared account had to be taken of
the man; and so with his Order, whenever it appears it is to be
recognized either by foes to oppose it or friends to love it and
forward its work. It has its churches—its missions—its colleges. In
its churches it is faithful to the teaching of Christ and His Church,
loyal ever to the Vicar of Christ; in its missions, unbounded in zeal
and personal self-sacrifice; in its colleges, it aims ever at the
solid and thorough training of complete Christian education. Ignatius
of Loyola made his Order to go on without him, and it goes on just as
he made it.</p>
<hr class="short" />
<p class="allsc center">PRINTED BY BENZIGER BROTHERS, NEW YORK</p>
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