iforr onal itv -' r /' : *f & * fy^jw i\ i u*- ,-~ ,""~ iir~~ nar" ~ ' ' " "^ m^m^^^M^ ,- QVO'Up.AM MVLIE, fflfrS/ ^ ^L ^^v^^^-^? 'MJLIORI., ^n^i'^ '^V/a y MOQVO SOLO CHI(L- STVM C^PEf^ET, DVM TOTVM,B^SI UVSlO^K[.HEI(pLD. CIVI C^ELESTI. P. VIC IT M.D. SE OCTOB. TR1VMPHAT SLJi- TERJJVM. MONUMENTAL INSCRIPTION TO THE MEMORY or Or \MIMA MOHAT 1556. OLYMPIA MORATA, LIFE AND WRITINGS, ARRANGKD fHOM CONTEMPORARY AND OTHER AUTHORITIES, BY THE AUTHOR OF SELWYN," " MORNINGS WITH MAMMA," " PROBATION,' "TALES or THE MOORS," ETC. I could have died For ihre, my country ! but I might not dwell In tbt tweet vales at peace. The voice of long Breathes with the myrtle scent, thy bills along ; The citron's glow is caught from shade and dell ; But what are these ? upon thy flowery tod I might not kneel, and pour my free thought! out to God. With nought my spirit breathing! to control ? I will, I will rejoice! My soaring soul Now hath redeemed htr birthright of the day, And won through clouds to Him her own unfettered way. Mm. HCMAKI. LONDON: SMltH, ELDER AND CO., CORNHILL. 1834. LONDON : PRINTED BY STEWART AND CO. OLD BAII.EY. TO HER MAJESTY, ADELAIDE, QUEEN OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, THE FOLLOWING MEMORIALS OF A DISTINGUISHED FEMALE, ORIGINALLY DEDICATED TO HER ILLUSTRIOUS PREDECESSOR, QUEEN ELIZABETH, ARE, WITH PECULIAR APPROPRIATENESS, AND RESPECTFUL GRATITUDE FOR THE GRACIOUS PERMISSION, Inscribed, BY THE AUTHOR. 2203159 CONTENTS. Page INTRODUCTORY NOTICE ' ix PART I. Olympia Morata ; Her Times ... 1 P ART H. Her Life . . .129 PART III. Her Writings . 253 APPENDIX : Ancient Psalms, published in 1543 385 ILLUSTRATIONS. MONUMENTAL INSCRIPTION . . . Frontispiece COSTUMES OF AUGSBURGH . 184 INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. OLYMPIA MOKATA, the beautiful and ac- complished subject of the following memoir, was a young lady of Ferrara, educated as a companion and model to the daughters of the princely house of Este ; and, from her high endowments, natural and acquired, the friend and idol of the most learned men of her day. Having embraced the Reformed tenets, then beginning to excite suspicion in Italy, she narrowly escaped persecution in her own country by marrying and fol- X INTRODUCTORY NOTICE lowing to his native Germany, an amiable youth of similar opinions. It was, how- ever, only to be plunged by an untoward fate in all the horrors and vicissitudes of war. Successively the inhabitant of va- rious besieged cities, and hunted from one to another by the utmost virulence of bi- gotry pestilence, famine and peril were her portion during the brief remainder of a life, whose termination they accelerated at the early age of twenty-nine ; when she gently expired, lamented by all who admired her talents or appreciated her virtues. Elegant poems (chiefly on sacred subjects) in Greek and Latin, and familiar letters, breathing the very soul of unobtrusive piety, establish her claim to the admiration of posterity, and the affection of a large circle of sorrowing friends. Her death took place at Heidelberg, in 1555. It is to brief but beautiful notices of this interesting person, occurring in the admirable INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. XI work of Dr. M'Crie on the progress and sup- pression of the Reformation in Italy, that the authoress is indebted for the pleasure derived from the compilation of the following pages. The motive to which they owed their origin was simply the desire of becoming herself better acquainted with, and introducing to other unlearned readers, the life and writings of a Christian heroine uniting, in so rare and eminent a degree as Olympia Morata, the qualities and accomplishments which en- gage human esteem, with the more imperish- able treasures of that " better part," of which early death itself could not deprive her. With this, as the pleasing task proceeded, might mingle a spark of pardonable fe- male exultation, at the discovery happily for the sex, no unprecedented one how compatible are not only great natural ta- lents, but the deepest acquired erudition, with the most feminine delicacy and gentle- ness of character with a sweetness of dis- INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. position which quickly converted cold pane- gyrists into affectionate friends, and an unostentatious fervour of piety, which, while it disarmed death of its sting, imparted even to the grief of bereaved survivors somewhat of its own heavenly balm. Last, not least, while the bright galaxy of virtue and talent displayed by Olympia and her gifted associates in religion and litera- ture floated, like some angelic vision, before the mind's eye the thought would exult- ingly (not, it is hoped, presumptuously or unbecomingly) arise how foremost ever in the ranks of spiritual truth, have shone its female votaries, in every age and country, where rays of genuine light from on high have been graciously permitted to pene- trate from pious Anna, first to acknow- ledge in the Jewish Temple, the glory veiled in infant garb from many a prouder eye and those devoted " Maries," whose cheer- ful ministry to a houseless Master was re- INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. XU1 warded with the first glimpse of their resus- citated Saviour and Lydia, whose " heart" the same " Lord opened" and the u ho- nourable women not a few" who hung for salvation on the lips of Paul to the not less docile or less devoted daughters of our own glorious Reformation the dauntless Anne Askew, and intrepid Elizabeth, and saint-like Jane Grey of England the high- souled and benevolent Renee of France, and the accomplished Olympia Morata of Italy. Let these, and a thousand more well-known names, with others no less meritorious, whose " record is on high," bear witness, that where- ever true Christianity has emerged from the mists of error and superstition, there women have been found to pour their early and wil- ling tribute. And while we appeal for the soundness as well as sincerity of the homage, to the sufferings for the truth of one, and the love to the brethren of another, and the ad- mirably scriptural writings of a third mav XIV INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. not the union of them all, in the gifted sub- ject of the following memoir, awaken for her, in the hearts of Christian females of our hap- pier and less perturbed days, a feeling warmer and holier than mere talent could ever com- mand, or even abstract goodness, apart from the charities and sufferings of humanity, in which she so largely participated, could ever inspire ? If so, the fruits of a few hours of leisure will not be confined to the solitary gratifi- cation they have afforded ; and those laurels of earth, and palms of immortality, which flourished so lovely and undivided in the life of Olympia Morata, may be taught, though by no skilful hand, to blend once more over her early grave. INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. TO OLYMPIA MORATA. WHAT shall thy praise resound ? bright child of song ! The classic lyre of Greece, which, swept by thee, Woke deep Eolian echoes, slumbering long ? Or thy own land's soft lute, whose harmony Breathed, all unconscious, from thy hand and heart '( Not these ! For thou didst chuse that better part, The Harp of Zion, and to holier shell Didst, swan-like, sing thine own untimely dirge. Oh ! how unlike (in all, save Genius' spell) To the wild, fiery Lesbian on life's verge I see thee stand, nor raging depths explore, But with meek heav'nward eyes on dove-like pinions soar. Thou too didst love but though a hallow'd band, Knit by high kindred hopes, and faith sublime, Led thee reluctant from thy fatherland, Yet, to the last faint sand of ebbing Time, Yearn'd thy soft bosom for its rosy clime ! Still, from ungenial northern realms afar Came angel tokens of enduring love, Till, by blind havoc of relentless war Driv'n harassed forth, at length the exil'd dove, With heart yet clinging to her land of flow'rs, Sought for her wearied foot repose in deathless bowers ! XVI INTRODUCTORY NOTICE. Brief was thy earthly span ! Thou wert of those Bright things which suns and storms alike decay. In a court's sunshine nurs'd, the opening rose Shrunk meekly from its withering glare away, To be, ere long, the ruder tempest's prey. Playmate of princes ! idol of a court ! Worshipp'd of sages ! was it thine each dire Extreme of ill to prove ? Th' unhallowed sport Of a rude soldiery ? plague, famine, fire ? Yes ! and 'twas thine amid that ordeal dread, A guiltless victim, with unfaltering steps to tread. It sank at length subdued, that martyr frame, A seraph spirit's perishable shrine. How brighter glow'd in death th' undying flame Of raptured faith ! while many a tender line Prov'd how pure earthly ties with homeward thoughts may twine ; While parting words, with heaven's own odours fraught, Drop, balm-distilling, on each sorrowing heart, Fancy revives the scene we see in thought The lov'd of mortals to that sphere depart Where mortal loves are all unknown. Oh ! why ? Blest thought! all there are robed in Immortality! OLYMPIA MORATA. PART I. HER TIMES. THE writer of these pages knows not how the discovery may have affected others, more learned, more callous, or more philosophical than her- self; but it was with a sense of strange and spirit-stirring emotion, that she first gathered, from the valuable work of her countryman, Dr. M'Crie, how bright, though brief a ray, the beacon-light of the blessed Reformation, once shed over now, alas ! universally benighted Italy. It might originate, perhaps, in the indefinable degree of personal interest, which a sojourn of some length in that beautiful country seldom fails to inspire perhaps, in a holier feeling still B 2 OLYMPIA MORATA. that of sympathy for the deep and palpable darkness, which has settled down, after the short-lived flash of mental illumination, on the religious character of a people, who once " heard the truth gladly," and whom that truth, (not un- timely quenched and stifled) would, like our- selves, have " made free." Nor was this painful, and in the end, en- grossing contrast, the only one which enhanced, at the time, the novel view afforded of Italy, by her partial adoption of the tenets of the Reforma- tion. There was no other possible feature, either of history or romance, which her eventful chronicle had not exhausted. In arms, in mag- nificence, in freedom nay even in degeneracy and misfortune her pre-eminence had, at some period or other, been unquestioned. Her mili- tary glory under the Romans under the popes, the fine arts, which consoled her amid de- cline the stormy freedom and poetical tri- umphs of her middle ages the flush of hectic beauty still lingering in the last stage of decay, on her well-nigh lifeless features and decrepid institutions all had been in turn the theme of exultation or regret : till sympathy for great names alone kept alive an interest, in most HER TIMES. minds vague and unsatisfactory, as the chaos of virtue and crime, of glory and meanness, of magnificence and decay, on which it had its foundation. Amid all the stages of this long, and in its latter portions distressing vista, into the times and things of old, how refreshing was the sunny spot of calm and hallowed beauty, of which (for the first time, perhaps, to the general reader) a glimpse has been afforded by our in- defatigable countryman ! To find, that even in close contact with, and under the direct influ- ence of papal tyranny, the " truth as it is in Jesus" had but to show its lovely face, to be at once hailed and recognized by many of the master spirits of a deeply-learned age ; to see, " pressing," in despite of persecution and mar- tyrdom, " into the kingdom of heaven," the suddenly enlightened monk the strangely humbled philosopher the princess on her cheerfully hazarded throne and her young and tender, yet unshrinking convert and pro- tegee formed, indeed, a spectacle, which men and angels might gaze on with pleasure; and over which, when, like some bright vision, it fades from our delighted view, we can scarce B 2 4 OLYMPIA MORATA. refrain from murmuring, that the flames of per- secution, and thick clouds of error should have early and sadly closed. But that an end, mightier far in the counsels of Omnipotence, than our finite views can discern, was attained by even this short " time of re- freshing from on high," it becomes us not to doubt ; and while, in all probability, to the bright names of martyrs and confessors, which have descended to us (embalmed chiefly in the frail memorial of contemporary correspondence) might be added those of hundreds of obscure converts the pious reader is in no danger of lacking gratitude for a Reformation, which swelled the ranks of protestantism with such names, and such characters as those of Ochino and Peter Martyr, of Paleario, and of Curio, of Renee of Ferrara, and her favourite and ours, Olympia Morata ! For the glow of Christian triumph which these names have inspired, we are indebted to the author so often mentioned ; and if, in striving to extend its gladdening influence to other fe- male bosoms, some degree of plagiarism may be unavoidable, it is not the thankless and shame- less robbery, which seiks to appropriate what it HER TIMES. 5 could never have originated but rather the humble and reverential feeling with which the refreshing draught from some costly marble fountain, is transferred in a cup, precious for its homely utility alone to the lip of the hur- ried and unobservant traveller. But, perhaps, to enable the reader to estimate aright the character, and sympathise with the vicissitudes of the heroine, whom it is the object of the following little work to make more fully known, it may be necessary to dwell more mi- nutely on the circumstances of the court beneath whose smiles that character was developed, than would have been consistent with the views of the general historian of the Italian Reformation. In the end of the fifteenth, and beginning of the sixteenth century at which latter period flourished the charming woman, the biographical memoir of whom it is deemed expedient rather to usher in by this preliminary sketch of her " times," than, by blending both, to weaken the interest of an unbroken narrative the cities of northern Italy comprised all that was polished and distinguished, and attractive in the lately re- suscitated arts, and revived literature of Europe. Italian writers, and their skilful and gifted in- 6 OLYMPIA MORATA. terpreter, our own accomplished Roscoe, have made the name of Florence almost synonimous with that of Athens ; and placed before us, in sober reality, what might rather pass for a poetic vision of that court of the Medici, whose sove- reigns were poets, their counsellors philosophers, and their very recreations and popular pastimes cast in a classic mould. But well may the writer of these humble pages shelter herself under the admission of even the biographer of Lorenzo, when he thus acknowledges the dis- tracting variety, as well as unparalleled richness of his subject. " A mind of greater compass," says he, " and the possession of uninterrupted leisure, would be requisite to comprehend, to select, and to arrange the immense variety of circumstances which a full narrative of those times would involve ; when almost every city of Italy was a new Athens, and that favourite country could boast its historians, its poets, its orators, and its artists, who may contend with the great names of antiquity for the palm of mental excellence; when Venice, Milan, Rome, Flo- rence, and Ferrara vied with each other, not in arms but in science and genius ; and when the splendor of a court was estimated by the num- HER TIMES. 7 her and talents of the learned men who illus- trated it by their presence ; each of whose lives and productions would, in a work of this nature, merit a full and separate discussion." But, happily for her, it is one of those courts alone that last mentioned, of Ferrara whose intellectual glories it falls within her province to record ; and truly, not all the justly boasted patronage of the Medici could exalt (except, perhaps, in the departments of sculpture and painting) their renowned capital, above the com- paratively far less known metropolis of the house of Este. The princes of that illustrious house, thanks to their munificence, and steady encouragement of letters, have not lacked biographers; from the eulogistic, yet scarcely exaggerated poetical tri- bute of the author of the Orlando, to the sober prose of many a matter-of-fact historian. The earlier sovereigns of Ferrara contrived to com- bine with the character of renowned warriors, the more enviable one of successful pacificators. To one of them, Ariosto, in the prophetic vision afforded to his hero, of the coming glories of his illustrious line, ascribes the noblest of preroga- tives that of employing his victorious arms to 8 OLYMPIA MORATA. put a stop to the future ravages of war : and their stormiest reigns generally afforded a tran- quil evening, devoted to good government and the welfare of their people. Thence arose the wealth and prosperity which gave birth to the splendid palaces and public buildings, which yet astonish the comparatively few travellers who visit Ferrara; and stand, in their silence and solitude, the memorials of a greatness for ever passed away. But to no one who has seen Ferrara, even in her desolation, will it be at all difficult to recall her days of splendor and prosperity. Indeed, a charming recent writer, whose picture of the former is affecting even to sadness, says, " The city looks as if it only wanted the inhabitants back, to resume in a moment, all its attractions." His sketch of its present condition, to which the writer of these pages can add a heart-felt corro- boration, is as follows. "Ferrara is a melancholy city very me- lancholy. The principal streets are long and wide, with a pavement on each side smoothly flagged. There are numbers of palaces, spacious and many-windowed, with arched gateways be- low, and proud cornices above. There are long HER TIMES. 9 narrow streets in other parts of this fair city ; but in these, the grass grows long, and the planted foot treads on the hard round paving pebbles. Monasteries, too, and convents, open into them ; but the convent-bells are silent ; no monk comes forth from the gate ; no beggar lies under the wall. There is no hoof-clatter on the paved streets : there are no beautiful women looking from the windows; no hand- some horsemen riding by unbonnetted ; no rib- boned jennets in the court-yards; no silken tapestries hanging from the balconies. You cannot but feel sad, as you walk about this city, whose ' symmetry was not made for soli- tude.' " * Let us endeavour to wield the wand alluded to by the elegant and feeling writer, and con- jure up, from the graphic pages of an old 'chronicler, one of those scenes of real, not fic- titious splendour, which contrasts so forcibly with the above melancholy picture of silence and decay. The following gorgeous account is given of the elevation of the warlike Borso d'Este, to the ducal dignity, and of the admi- * Sherer's " Scenes in Egypt and Italy." 10 OLYMPIA MORATA. table conduct by, which that elevation was amply justified. " Frederick the Third, on his passage to Rome, was invited by Borso to Ferrara, and treated there for a week most magnificently, with all his train, consisting of above two thou- sand persons. He presented the emperor, at his departure, with forty of the finest horses in Italy, * besides other rarities ; the German princes and nobility, every one according to his quality, carrying away some token of the mar- quis's liberality. " The emperor, wonderfully taken with the noble nature of Borso, resolved to advance him to the dignity of a duke, which was done at his return in this manner : A large theatre being erected in the middle of the piazza, before the palace, and upon it a throne of cloth of gold ; the emperor, in his imperial robes, with the crown which the pope had set on his head some * This munificence seems to have been usual with Borso. In the famous tournament of Lorenzo di Medici, in 1468, it is said, that while his armour was furnished by the Duke of Milan, " the steed on which he relied in the combat, was presented to him by Borso, Marquis of Ferrara." Roscoe's Lorenzo di Medici. HER TIMES. 11 days before, came thither, and being placed on his throne, with the King of Hungary sitting upon his right hand, and the Duke of Austria upon his left, besides many German princes placed according to their quality Borso being richly apparelled, and attended by four hun- dred gentlemen, dressed all in the same manner, began his cavalcade at the old castle, and rode from thence towards the piazza, three of the chief officers of his court carrying large banners before him ; the first of which had the imperial eagle, as the arms of the house of Este, in a field vert, and immediately after them a gentle- man with a naked sword. When they came near the theatre, and saw the throne, all alighted ; and Borso, advancing towards the throne, kneeled before it, and had his ducal robes put on by the emperor, who delivered him the first banner for the earldom of Rovigo ; the second for the duchy of Modena and Reggio ; the third, with the naked sword, as a badge of his absolute authority, making him take his place by the King of Hungary ; whereupon all the ambassadors came to the duke to compli- ment him ; the emperor in his patent expressly mentioning, his doing now the same honour to 12 OLYMPIA MORATA. the house of Este, which Frederick the Second had done about two hundred years before, to that branch of it settled in Germany, meaning the Dukes of Lunenburgh and Brunswick. The ceremony being over, they returned to the palace, where the emperor was treated according to the solemnity of the occasion ; and having stayed some days longer, went for Germany, Ferdinand and all his court being fully satisfied that this great honour was well placed upon Borso. " He was, in truth, a just, splendid, and bountiful prince : every day he used to walk in the outer court of his palace, there to hear what- soever complaints were brought against him. If he observed any one that had not the con- fidence to come, he called to them, and by his affable carriage encouraged them to speak ; and in this he took a particular pleasure, often saying it was the chief work of princes to be ready to examine and redress the grievances of the mean- est of their subjects. * The hospitality and * A most decisive testimony to the virtues and popularity of him who bore with such justice the title of the good Duke Borso, existed in the right of "asylum or sanctuary," which, for centuries after his death (indeed till the usurpation of HER TIMES. 13 bounty of Borso were yet beyond the rest : whoever came within the court might eat and drink what they pleased, officers being still in readiness to treat them according to their qua- lity. The names of all the poor in the city were written down, their wants plentifully relieved, and portions given by the duke with their daughters in marriage. Every Christmas day, the treasury being opened, Borso came thither in person, and called all to whom he or his officers owed any thing, to receive their money ; which, being done, as seldom it was then to do, with his own hands he divided what remained, among the gentlemen of his court. These princely virtues made his subjects heartily love him : and the love of his subjects was, of all things, most proper to recommend him to stran- gers. The Duke of Milan and the Venetians, who differed in most things, agreed in their good opinion of Borso. His family after him bore the honourable badge of the value the emperor and pope had for him ; and as if all Ferrara by the Roman see), extended for twenty paces in every direction around his equestrian statue opposite the ca- thedral, a privilege inscribed on the pedestal of the statue ilself. 14 OLYMPIA MORATA. this had been too little, or as if somewhat of partiality had been in it, because proceeding from those of his own country and religion, a great Mahometan prince, the Sultan of Egypt, by an embassy and rich presents sent to Borso a little before his death, did demonstrate that his reputation was too large to be confined within Italy, or indeed within Europe." If such was the fame and magnificence of Ferrara, as early as 1452, it was far from having degenerated in the days when a Hercules or Alfonso * reigned, and an Ariosto, a Tasso, or an Olympia Morata basked in the sunshine of a court, whose splendour as far transcended the inconsiderable extent of its dominion and reve- nues, as in elegance and cultivation it surpassed the then rude and turbulent great monarchies of * " The family of Este," says Mr. Roscoe, " may be con- sidered powerful rivals to the Medici in the encouragement of learning and the arts." Of Alfonso the First, he says, " he was one of the first commanders of the age, and adored as the father of his subjects. And though no scholar, his encourage- ment of learned men was such, that he made use of his own plate and purse, to relieve the wants or pay the salaries of those whom he had invited to his court, and treated like friends and equals." Roscoe's Life of Benvenuto Cellini. HER TIMES. 15 Europe. When the German empire was a mere bloody arena for rival and often unworthy oppo- nents ; when France, torn by intestine divisions, could afford the dove of literature no rest for the sole of her foot ; when England, under the ferocious sway of her eighth Henry, presented a vast scaffold, to whose horrors learning and beauty seemed an equally certain passport, and from which, rank and sex afforded no protection ; when even pontifical Rome, where the harassed votaries of letters might have anticipated not only shelter, but patronage, was, according to the testimony of an indignant contemporary, a place in which the refugees from Constantinople, the misfortune-hallowed depositaries of all the exiled learning of the East, might have starved, but for the munificence of the houses of Medici and of Este Ferrara,the seat of the latter, could with justice be described by the same writer in this glowing though antiquated language, which it would be a pity to weaken by modernizing. " But the late duke did yet outdo all those who were before him, rendering his court an epitome of whatever was fine or great in France, Germany, or Italy. Princes came long journeys on purpose to see it ; and by all their confes- 16 OLYMPIA MORATA. sions, though some courts might be greater, yet none, in other respects, came near to that of Ferrara. " Nor was it an empty shew ; for with that noble entertainment such as Italy hath not since seen, for strangers of all qualities, some thou- sands of poor had their daily maintenance there. The young gentlemen of quality were at such an age received into the number of the dukes pages, and bred up to all manner of exercises, beyond any academy in the world. The happy influence a virtuous court has, upon all near it, was here apparent ; for the whole city resembled a great university, academies being erected for painting, music, poetry, and mathematics, and the like, in every corner. The very monasteries turned seminaries of virtue ; and most citizens, con- sulting the capacity and genius of their children, spared no charge in breeding them to what one day they hoped might advance their fortunes at such a court." To these prose testimonies and many others might be adduced to the princely qualities of the house of Este, let us add that of the monarch of Italian poets, who has acknowledged its splendid patronage by one of the few panegyrics, HER TIMES. 17 from which posterity has not found it necessary to make any material abatement. Of the Borso above mentioned, equally cele- brated as a warrior and a peace-maker, he says : Vedi Leonello, e vedi il primo Dace Fama della sua eta, 1' ioclito Borso Che siede in pace, e piu trionfo adduce Di quanti in altnii terra abbian corso Chiudera Marte, ove piu non veggia luce E stringera al furore le mani al dorso, Di questo Signor splendido, ogni intento Sara che'l popol suo viva contento. Lionel see ! and him, first duke proclaimed Borso the invincible ! His age's pride Who, 'mid his trophies sits, for ever famed, Adding this brighter meed to all beside : By him shall Mars in dungeon dark be tamed, And strife's fell hands bound harmless by her side. While every wish that lordly heart can feel, Shall fondly centre in his people's weal ! We cannot resist the panegyric on his own special patron, the munificent Cardinal Hip- polito, of whom Brantome says, " No prince or c 18 OLYMPIA MORATA. prelate ever showed himself more noble, splen- did, or liberal." Quel che in pontificate abito imprime Del purpureo cappel la sacra chioma E il liberal, magnanimo e sublime Gran Cardinal della chiesa di Roma Ippolito ! ch'a prosa, a versi, a rime D ara materia eterna in ogni idioma. La cui fiorita eta, vuole il ciel giusto Ch'abbia un Maron, com' un altro ebbe Augusto ! Little did Ariosto, when he wrote these extra- vagantly eulogistic lines, foresee their exact fulfil- ment first, in Hippolito's praise really becom- ing (and by his means) celebrated in every civi- lized idiom ; still less that he should occupy, in the eyes of posterity, a position as immeasurably superior to that of his princely Mecsenas, as his own fame, however great, must yet fall short of the majesty of Virgil. There is one more stanza of this prophetic vista of the fortunes of the house of Este, which, with the alteration of a single word, expresses, in the most terse and bitter manner, the papal ingratitude towards this princely line. It is HER TIMES. 19 when after a beautiful allusion to the re- ceived opinion which placed on the banks of the Po, near the site of Ferrara, the scene of the catastrophe of the ambitious Phaeton and the metamorphosis into a swan of the despair- ing Cygnus he says of this classical terri- tory "E questa, di mille oblighi mercede Gli donera 1'apostolica sede." If, instead of " give," we read, that in token of a thousand obligations, the pope should " take away" this rich inheritance, we shall have, in two lines, a poetical picture of that death-blow to the power and greatness of Fer- rara, which its prose historian thus feelingly bewails " Little did they (the citizens of Ferrara) ima- gine their envied felicity was so near a period that Alfonso the Second was to be the last Duke of Ferrara or that the Court of Este was to be removed to another city ; while they, having no prince either to reward their virtue or redress their grievances, were to be left to the mercy of ministers that bought their places c 2 20 OLYMPIA MORATA. at Rome, and came thither only to reimburse themselves at Ferrara's cost." The pretext for this spoliation (which took place in the person of a grand-nephew of that Duke Hercules, at whose court Olympia Mo- rata flourished, and on whose reign we shall, on that account, have occasion to dwell more minutely than this brief preliminary sketch will allow) was the supposed illegitimacy of a younger brother of Hercules by his father's last wife the lovely but lowly-born Laura Eustochia on which slenderly-supported plea the pope as- serted the sovereignty of Ferrara to have re- verted to the holy see. Loaded with excommunications by him whom his uncle had been instrumental in elevating to the papacy, and menaced with the whole power of Rome, the young Duke Ceesar (whom his own subjects had not, for a mo- ment, hesitated to acknowledge) hastily re- solved to save his other dominions, by relin- quishing Ferrara ; and the sudden withdrawal of the court, and with it of all whose territorial possessions did not confine them to the spot, to Modena gave the death-blow to the long prosperity and magnificence of the former ; HER TIMES. 21 which afforded, in little more than half a cen- tury, the picture of desolation it has ever since exhibited.* The impression is certainly heightened by the dreary nature of the surrounding country, at least as seen by the writer of these pages on the approach of winter ; when the turbid and swollen torrents of the Po and the Rheno threatened it with hourly overflow : while dykes, elevated like those of Holland, formed the only roads, and boats a necessary appendage to the di- lapidated and solitary farms. There is one circumstance connected with Ferrara in her high and palmy state, which has, no doubt, often disposed the modern traveller to view, with a satisfied feeling of poetical jus- tice, the retributive curse, which seems to have closed, not inappropriately, the line of Ferrara.'s sovereigns in the person of the relentless jailor * Misson, who travelled in 1687, says, " the desolation of Ferrara at that period was pitiable, and that he and his illustrious pupil, the son of the Duke of Ormond, stood some minutes on a piazza, whence the two principal streets direrged, with- out seeing a soul in any of them." He mentions as one cause of the ruin of the place, that, in 1570, it experienced within forty hours, no less than 160 shocks of an earthquake. 22 OLYMPIA MORATA. of Tasso.* In the dungeon of Santa Anna it is certainly impossible either to think or speak charitably of the " magnanimo Alfonso ;" nor can any motive vindicate the sordid destitution, of which the gifted captive complained to in- dignant Europe. But perhaps, in a calmer and more impartial mood, the uniform testimony borne by all contemporaries to the mild as well as princely character of the duke, may incline us to that less odious view of the transaction, which represents the incarceration of the bard rather as a measure of mistaken compassion for the undoubted occasional aberrations of a master-mind, than of isolated and wholly gra- tuitous cruelty. Be this as it may, even the indignant shade of the Italian Virgil might be propitiated by the gloom, and desolation, and silence, which the proud palace of his oppressor now more than shares with the hospital (situated * By a coincidence too singular not to be mentioned, it was in this dungeon that a party of friends of the writer re- ceived the very first intelligence which reached Italy (by way of Dalmatia) of the death of the illustrious author of the " Lament of Tasso !" The vanity of earthly renown has ex- torted few more strangely-mingled tributes, than the sigh given in the cell of Tasso, to the memory of Byron ! HER TIMES. 23 exactly opposite), where Tasso, amid darkness, chains, and occasional insanity, breathed forth the most wonderful Epic of modern times. The thoughtful mind might find food for much reflection in the contrast afforded by the literary career of the two great poets of Italy. Ariosto, who chose for the subject of his muse the wildest and most puerile fictions of chivalry and romance partaking but too often of the licentiousness of a later age lived in the uni- form enjoyment of court favor, and acquired, even in his life time, the epithet of " Divine !" Tasso, whose selection of a splendid Christian theme was sustained throughout by the sincerest and sublimest piety, as well as the most ele- vated genius, began his life in exile and mis- fortune, passed one of its fairest portions in a dungeon, and had its evening embittered by a rancour of contemporary criticism which com- pelled him to remodel (greatly to its disadvan- tage) his immortal poem. The death of Tasso, ere the laurel awarded by a tardily grateful country could reach his fevered r brow his sepulture, scarce distinguished by a stone in the obscure church of San Onofrio at Rome while the tomb, and chair, and inkstand of Ariosto, 24 OLYMPIA MORATA. form still the sole boast and pride of declining Ferrara, complete the parallel.* If the lyres of earth are to be estimated by their fitness to join, unaltered, save in added power and sweetness, the harmonies on high, how different will be the rank assigned to the two great poets of Ferrara ! In taking leave of the vexed and harassed bard of Jerusalem, pining in darkness and captivity, we may say, in the words of his own Christian heroine, Sofronia, to her less courageous companion in martyrdom Va ! lieto aspira alia superna sede ! Mira il ciel com' e bello e mira il sole Ch' a se par che n'invite e ne console ! Rise ! joyful, rise ! to yonder realm of light ! Behold yon beauteous heav'ns, yon radiant sun, That beckoning smile, and to their sphere invite ! And gladly do we ourselves turn, (as if in com- pliance with the soft, celestial invitation, and lured by the heavenward train of thought it has * A ragged boy, while conducting the writer and her party to the university, said, exultingly, " How proud you will be to-morrow, to write to your friends in England, that you have sat in Ariosto's chair !" HER TIMES. 25 involuntarily suggested) alike from the pomps and pageants of Ferrara's earlier days, and the sad spectacle of her decline, to that lovely middle ground of moral and intellectual su- premacy which she exhibited in the intervening period, to which our attention will hencefor- ward, it is hoped not unprofitably, be directed. The earlier part of the sixteenth century is allowed by all to have been singularly fertile in men of talent and learning ; and of those thus endowed, it would scarcely be credited by any whose attention had not been directed to the subject, how large a portion the magnet, re- siding in one generous and Christian female bosom, had power to attract within her sphere. The marriage of the accomplished Renee of France, daughter of Louis XII., with Duke Hercules the Second of Ferrara, and the na- tural deference of a petty sovereign for a wife thus elevated above him by rank, seemed won- derfully designed to enable her to afford at her court that asylum, which so many votaries of religion and letters were, ere long, to require from the impending storm of persecution. Had the protestantism fragile of course, and imper- fectly imbibed in stolen visits to the court of Navarre of a youthful princess of two-and- 26 OLYMPIA MORATA. twenty, been carried, at that early age (as her betrothment to its monarch rendered at one time probable), to the bigotted court of Ma- drid, -the trembling bride of the all-powerful Charles V., little favoured as she was in per- son upheld by no sense of superiority in birth and estranged by the stern usages of Spain from intercourse with her own country- women would, in all probability, have shrunk into a timid professor at least, of Catholicism ; and her utmost efforts in favour of a purer creed might have been as fruitlessly exerted in mi- tigating the rigours of an Auto da Fe, as those of her Aa(/"-protestant daughter, Anne, (when married to a scion of the bigotted house of Guise,) were to move the iron heart of Ca- therine di Medici to shorten, by a moment, the horrors of the massacre of St. Barthelemi. But the faith of Renee, though destined to be tried, and that by domestic persecution, was not doomed to extinction ; and, in rewarding, by his daughter's hand, the military services and unshaken fidelity of Hercules of Este, Louis was but unconsciously fulfilling the designs of Providence, for her own immortal welfare, and that of others. HER TIMES. 27 Her birth had been regarded (almost prophe- tically) by her mother, as a special boon, hav- ing long resigned hopes of another child ; and she was, in consequence it is to be hoped not inappropriately named Renee, literally signi- fying " born again." Her education seems to have been placed in excellent hands ; for, be- sides the eulogium universally paid by French authors to those talents and acquirements, by which her personal imperfections were amply compensated, she had, in Madame de Soubise, her governess, who accompanied her to the court of Ferrara, not only an able and conscientious instructress, but a firm supporter in those doctrines of the Reformation, which both had brought from their common country;* and of which the noble house of Parthenai were to be in after, and still more troublesome times, distinguished champions and martyrs. Anne de Parthenai, * She was the worthy sister of the Vicomte d'Aubeterre, who left all he had in the world, for the sake of religion, "and," says Brant6me, "though a nobleman of the best family, submitted to gain his living at Geneva, (where I saw him in great poverty ) by the laborious trade of a button- maker." He afterwards rejoined the protestant army of France, and was condemned to death, but pardoned at the request it is said, of the Duke of Guise more probably that of his amiable duchess, the daughter of Hunt c. 28 OLYMPIA MORATA. daughter to Madame de Soubise, educated with Renee, and who, to equal enthusiasm in classical and theological learning, added an ex- quisite voice and great proficiency in music, proved the means of inducing her husband, (who accompanied her to Ferrara, and shared her pursuits,) to extend not only protection, but his warmest countenance, to the cause of the Reformation. Two other heroines of the name, niece and grand-niece to Anne, sustained, with unflinching courage, the dreadful hardships of the siege of La Rochelle ; living (the mother at the age of upwards of eighty) on horse-flesh, and four ounces of bread per day ; yet writing to her brave son, the Duke de Rohan, to let no consideration of their extremity inducehim to make the slightest concession injurious to the protestant cause. Both ladies refused to be included in the capitulation, and remained, at their own request, prisoners of war.* The temptation to * Of this conduct, Madame de Soubise herself had set the worthy example ; having, on a former occasion, when her husband commanded at Lyons, on being told that she and her daughter were to be seized by the cathclics, and stabbed be- fore the gates of the place, if it did not surrender sent him letters, in which she intreated him to let them both perish, rather than desert his duty and his cause. HER TIMES. 29 digress thus far, to mention facts so honourable to female patriotism, was irresistible ; and the similarity of the sufferings endured during a siege, by the heroines of the French Reforma- tion, to those of Olympia Morata herself, may, perhaps, afford an additional palliation. With such associates, the germ of true reli- gion, which Renee had early cherished, was not likely to languish ; and so palpably was this the case, that the first painful shape in which do- mestic disapprobation of her opinions manifested itself was the command issuing, indeed, from the more paramount authority of the pope, and King of France to dismiss her beloved go- verness ; whose inestimable society she had, however, enjoyed for upwards of seven years.* Clement Marot (then at Ferrara) thus bewails to her cousin, the Queen of Navarre, Renee's grief on the occasion : Ha ! Marguerite ! ecoute la souffiance Du noble Coeur de Ren6e de France Puis comme sceur plus fort que d'esperance Console la ! * M'Crie's History of the Reformation in Italy. 30 OLYMPIA MORATA. Tu sais comment hors son pays alia, Et que parens et amis laissa la ; Mais tu ne sais quel traitement elle a En terre etrange. Elle ne voit ceux a qui se veut plaindre Son ceil rayant si loin ne peut atteindre Et puis les monts, pour ce bien lui 6teindre Sont entre deux. A charming family had, in the mean time, grown up, to console and reward their gifted parent, whose cares for their education were, as yet, fully seconded by her well-intentioned and complaisant husband. Hercules, of whom it is time to speak, had manifested early proofs of a disposition and ta- lents suited to the husband of so accomplished a princess. Being sent by his father, Alfonso, attended by the chief nobility of his court, to compliment Adrian the Sixth, on his elevation to the holy see, an old chronicler tells us that " the young prince, not yet fourteen years of age, having his audience of Adrian before the consistory, harangued so finely, and with so good a grace, that the pope embraced him with tears ; and, having asked him several questions in Latin, found him so much a master of that HER TIMES. 31 language, his answers so pertinent and lively, and, in his whole behaviour, a modest assur- ance so fitting to his age and quality, that Adrian declared, before all the cardinals, that he must grant the Duke of Ferrara whatever he demanded by so extraordinary an ambassador." Calcagnini has left, in a letter to Fulvio Mo- rata, the father of Olympia, the following tri- bute to the talents and virtues of Hercules : " What greater blessing," writes he, " can befal a people, than to have the public affairs administered by so excellent and so prudent a prince, whose sole or principal object is to make his subjects happy under his govern- ment ?" He goes on to praise his affability, his liberality, justice, eloquence and prudence, and is uncertain in which he excels. " Though he acts," says he, " as a prince, according to the dignity of his station, he never forgets that he is a man, and who does not admire his modera- tion ? Though most indulgent to all good men, he is far from being so to himself; and, though ever ready, by the most princely rewards to true genius, to promote the extension of science and literature, yet he never acts, either in public or private, without the advice of his 32 OLYMPIA MORATA. most enlightened counsellors. Indeed, he seems in youth to possess all the maturity of judgment which belongs to age ; and we ought to thank God that we have the prospect of long enjoying, from the course of nature, his many virtues, of which, and of the joy thereby afforded to his people, report will, I fear, convey to posterity a very inadequate idea. As for myself, I am far more aspiring than Apelles, who, when he found he could not complete his picture ot % Venus to his own satisfaction, wisely left it un- finished ; since I persist in endeavouring to con- vey a representation of a prince to whom So- crates himself would fail in doing justice." Such, with due allowance for the learned canon's classical hyperbole, was Hercules the Second, about the period of his marriage with Renee of France ; and such according to the testimony of the soberer historian, who says that, " in the fiftieth year of his age, he died universally beloved and regretted by his sub- jects, whom he had ruled with all gentleness," he remained through life. The chief blemish of his reign was the violence which, at the in- stigation of others, he exercised on the con- science of his amiable wife ; and the rigour HER TIMES. 33 with which he permitted foreign inquisitors to harass, and finally disperse the infant church of Ferrara. But for this, his times and education must perhaps be held responsible ; rather than harshness or indifference towards a partner, whom, her countryman Brantome says, " even when religion had somewhat embroiled matters between them, he always highly respected and honoured." And well had Renee of France deserved to be thus estimated, if the concurring testimony of men of all nations, and all parties, can hand down to the admiration of posterity a truly il- lustrious character. " Wise, witty, and vir- tuous," are terms too feeble to express the rntlmsiastic pride felt in her by her native biographers ; one of whom thus pleasingly cha- racterises even that exterior appearance, of which her virtues made her so truly independ- ent. " The daughter of Louis the Twelfth, without being handsome, was one of the most engaging persons in the world. She had an agreeable expression, fine eyes, beautiful teeth, and an air of youthful bloom, which rendered her countenance inexpressibly pleasing." Another, after alluding to some defects in D 34 OLYMPIA MORATA. her shape, says, " They were so amply com- pensated by the beauties of her mind, that, taking all together, she had far more reason to think herself obliged to nature than to com- plain. She had more delicacy and quickness of wit than had been seen in any woman not excepting those of Italy who pretend to it most and it was but a diversion to her to learn all that was most difficult in the most sublime sciences. Not one of her sex spoke of philosophy and divinity with a better grace, and she excelled in all parts of the mathe- matics, but especially astronomy." If to this we add the familiar knowledge of the Greek and Roman classics, great eloquence, and a dignity of deportment and manners, which, notwithstanding some personal disadvantages, enabled her admirably to support her high sta- tion, we shall have the picture unanimously drawn by native historians, of the qualities and accomplishments of her whom they fondly style " a true king's daughter of France." Let us now see how far, in these features of a truly noble character, they are corroborated by the testimony of her new subjects. The his- torian of Ferrara says, that " when, on her hus- HER TIMES. 35 band's death, she returned to her native country, she left all Ferrara (except the Jesuits) in tears for the loss of so incomparable a princess. The gentry, when she first came thither, consider- ing her as Louis the Twelfth's daughter, bred up in the most glorious court of Christendom, where princes of the blood, especially the king's children, could not have too much respect paid them, expected to be kept at a greater distance than under former duchesses ; but, on the con- trary, access to her was so easy, her conversa- tion so free, and her whole deportment so modest, that, had she been the daughter of a little Duke of Saluzzo, or a Laura Eustochia raised by her own virtue, she could not have taken less state upon her." The arrival of a princess, at once so dignified in birth, and so celebrated for talent and virtue as Renee, must, indeed, have derived, from the period at which it occurred, all the advantages of a favourable contrast. Alfonso the First, after the early dissolution, by death, of his union with the daughter of John Galeazzo, Duke of Milan, found himself compelled to purchase reconciliation with the Holy See, the then formidable displeasure of which had long sent D 2 36 OLYMPIA MORATA. him forth an exile from his dominions by a marriage with the infamous Lucretia Borgia, daughter of Pope Alexander the Sixth ; the moral atmosphere of whose court, if we may judge from the cautious silence of Ferrarese historians, and the unanimous execrations of all other contemporary authorities, must have been the very antipodes to that of the virtuous Renee. This disgrace to her sex, whom a popular French dramatist, in the prevailing avidity of his country for horrors, has recently chosen for the heroine of a tragedy, of which the passion of her illegitimate son for his unknown mother forms the groundwork, some dozen or so of gratuitous murders the episodes, and a whole- sale poisoning scene on the stage the denoue- ment must have infused into the tone of society at Ferrara a mingled levity and ferocity much requiring the hallowed purity of manners of a Renee to obliterate its remembrance. And the chastened splendour and innate dignity of the latter would be still farther heightened by com- parison with the unostentatious privacy of the last years of Alfonso, when, freed at length by death from his papal Messalina, he sought and HER TIMES. 37 found domestic comfort in his marriage with the low-born Laura Eustochia. The descent of Hercules the Second (the hus- band of Renee), and of his brother, the celebrated Cardinal of Ferrara, from Lucretia, sufficiently account for the silence on her enormities pre- served by native chroniclers ; while, in the rest of Europe, the name of Borgia has become sy- nonimous in her person and that of her bro- ther the atrocious Csesar, as well as of that op- probrium to the papacy, their father with every crime of which human nature is capable. She is said to have been eminently hand- some ; and truly the science of physiognomy must own itself at fault, while gazing, in the Borghese Gallery, on that matchless portrait of the youthful Csesar, which unites the perfec- tion of manly beauty with a dignity, grace, and openness of expression, which have in them something actually appalling, when found com- bined in the betrayer of a sister, the murderer of a brother, and, at length, (by the retributive justice of heaven, and the misdirection of a poisoned bowl,) the unintentional, biit scarcely less criminal, assassin of a parent. But the virtues of Renee needed not the foil 38 OLYMPIA MORATA. of comparison with monsters such as these, to set off their pure and hallowed lustre. Her munificence and charity, on which volumes might be written, are briefly characterized as follows 'by the already quoted historian of Fer- rara : " All the learned found the good effects of her patronage. The poor and sick were sure of relief orphans of care and protection : so that, in the whole city of Ferrara, there was scarce a person who could not shew some in- stance of that unlimited goodness which had, so long a time, diffused itself upon all her sub- jects, without missing rich or poor." Nor were her charities, or the sympathies in which they originated, confined to her new do- minions ; for, as Brantome exultingly testifies, she bore a true French heart, and never lost, however distant from it, the memory of her be- loved country. To her liberalities, and their princely scale, after her return to France, we shall have occasion afterwards to allude ; but, even while yet an alien, her poor countrymen participated largely in her bounty. " No Frenchman," says the same writer, " passing through Ferrara, and addressing himself to the HER TIMES. 39 duchess, ever failed to receive the necessary assistance to carry him on his journey home; and if sick, and unable to proceed, was care- fully attended at her expence, and dismissed with liberal alms. Thus," adds he, " I have been credibly informed, that, in the late dis- astrous expedition of Monsieur de Guise into Italy, this princess saved the lives of not much fewer than ten thousand persons of various ranks and professions, most of whom, but for her, would have literally died of hunger ; and many a necessitous gentleman of good family among the rest. Often have I heard them extol her liberality and charity ; and her maitre d'hotel once informed me that she expended in this way not less a sum than ten thousand crowns : and, on his remonstrating against so excessive an expence, she thus answered him : ' What would you have me do ? they are poor Frenchmen and countrymen, and would, if it had pleased God I had been born a man, or if that iniquitous Salique law had not interfered to prevent it, have been now my subjects.' " In the latter part of this reply, it is impos- sible not to recognise a trait of the same " coeur fort haut et noble," as Brantome calls it, which, 40 OLYMPIA MORATA. when at a subsequent period threatened with the whole power of France, for giving an asylum in her castle of Montargis to hundreds of dis- tinguished protestants dictated her noble reply to the Duke de Guise; which awed that proud champion of Catholicism from his purpose, and saved from present destruction her unfortunate inmates. The anecdote, though well known, is so cal- culated to raise in the reader's estimation the character of the princess, and to prove on what a noble groundwork of firmness and magna- nimity were based those doctrines of pure Chris- tianity, which we shall hereafter see she had not lightly embraced or patronised, that we cannot forbear relating it, perhaps prematurely, in the simple language of a contemporary : " The Duke of Guise, her son-in-law, not being able, either by entreaties or menaces, to bring her into the right way, sent thither John de Maliverne with four troops of horse, who, having summoned her to deliver up to him the chiefs of the factious who had fled to her into the castle threatening withal to bring cannon to get them out by force received an answer worthy a princess. ' Consider well,' said she, HER TIMES. 41 ' what you do. I will put myself foremost in the breach, and see whether you will have the insolence to kill a king's daughter !' ' Is it not delightful to see a woman thus, in the. expressive language of scripture, "valiant for the truth," and, at the same time, retaining, in their gentlest and most endearing form, the more feminine qualities of charity and mercy ? When, after entertaining, as Brant&me tells us, in the same castle of Montargis, more than three hundred protestants for a length of time, most of whom were indebted to her bounty for their daily maintenance, she was at length obliged, with the greatest reluctance, and by the para- mount authority of the king, to dismiss this persecuted band she furnished the distressed company, two-thirds of them consisting of help- less women and children, with an hundred and forty waggons, eight travelling coaches, and a great many horses. " So that," adds he, " if her courage appeared on a former occasion, her charity was now no less conspicuous." Having thus established, it is hoped, in the breast of the reader, a sympathetic feeling for one who, by such active exertions of virtue, thus gloriously supported the character of her 42 OLYMPIA MORATA. sex, return we to our primary object of examin- ing the share which enlightened and scriptural views of religion unquestionably had in the formation of so consistent and beautiful a cha- racter. Here, again to the eulogies, " fre- quent as leaves in Vallombrosa," of friends to herself and the bright doctrines she had adopted, we shall have to add the reluctant and very differently intended admissions of adversaries to both. Father Maimbourg, in his history of Calvinism, after giving the most unsuspicious of all testimonies that of an enemy to the wisdom, learning, probity, and goodness of Renee,* brings forward, as matter of accusa- tion, precisely that circumstance in her religion to which it probably owed both its stability and its lustre, viz. " that she too eagerly investigated on what the principles and differences of reli- gion turned ; and thence was led to commise- rate, and finally to approve and protect, the men who were driven from their homes for the sake of it." When industry in examining, can- dour in adopting, and firmness in maintaining * " EUe avait," says he, "un fond de bont6 in6puisable." HER TIMES. 43 the pure doctrines of scripture, are thus openly stigmatized, along with their beautiful results of personal piety, charity, and goodwill to men, it would be difficult indeed not to draw an infer- ence unfavourable to that opposite system, so feebly as well as erroneously advocated. The religious principles which the youthful Renee had brought into Italy, which had been happily fostered by the prolonged residence of her enlightened friend, Madame de Soubise, and strengthened by the diligent studies so dispa- ragingly alluded to by one of that body of Je- suits, whose rejoicings at her departure from Ferrara we have formerly noticed were destined to receive confirmation from the kindred opi- nions and yet more mature scriptural knowledge of some of the most eminent refugees from fo- reign persecution ; among others, of the cele- brated Calvin himself; who, driven from France, and attracted by the fame of the duchess, took refuge at Ferrara, in 1535. He came, furnished with the strongest recom- mendations from their mutual friend, the Queen of Navarre, to whom her cousin, Renee, owed not only the benefits arising from this, and many a similar interchange of hospitality to the exiles 44 OLYMPIA MORATA. for their common faith, but the precious germs of that faith itself; and who may well claim on these, and other grounds, a place in a narrative, of which the commemoration of female Christian excellence forms the avowed groundwork.* * Of her personal qualifications, so interesting to the female reader, the following glowing description is given by a memoir- writer of a shortly subsequent period. " The Queen of Na- varre had a tall elegant figure, and in her whole air, some- thing so graceful and engaging that it was impossible not to be in love with her. Her beauty was absolutely dazzling, and her eyes so brilliant, that it was difficult to bear unmoved, either their sparkling fire, or downcast softness. Hermouth was awon- der for shape and colour, and the regularity of her fine teeth enhanced the beauty of lips which seldom opened but to cheer the bystanders with wit or wisdom. The voice in which these oracles were delivered, was sweet-toned and harmoni- ous, and its gentle music irresistible. " The mind which inhabited this fair exterior, was worthy of its shrine. Her genius was so elevated and noble, as to com- mand for her name the veneration of posterity. She was pious far beyond others yet her piety, though so exemplary to thousands, was rather a matter of personal and private concern, than of ostentatious display. She was neither rigidly scrupulous nor severe on those around her, little given to cen- sure thinking no evil, and ever ready to excuse error and succour misfortune. Her disposition was cheerful and serene good-hearted beyond all expression trust- worthy, and HER TIMES. 45 This princess, about the extent of whose pro- fession of protestantism much has been unprofit- ably written, gave unequivocal proof of her reception of its leading features ; first, by her extreme diligence and regularity in reading the Scriptures, the necessity of which she inculcated on a recent convert, in the strong terms he has thus recorded, viz. " That he should never allow a day to pass, without dedicating a portion of it to an attentive perusal of some pages of the holy Book; which, watering the mind with dew from heaven, formed the best preservative against all evils and all temptations." Another proof of the prevalence of an emi- nently Christian spirit in the Queen of Navarre, may be found in her uniform endeavours, carried on for a series of years, and in the face of every discouragement not only to extend her personal protection to the protestants in her own domi- nions, but to use her great and well-merited influence over her brother, Francis the First, to moderate his rigour towards them, and counter- devoted to her friends; especially to her beloved brother, to whom she sacrificed the most brilliant foreign establish- ments." Mtmoires de la Reine de Navarre. 46 OLYMPIA MORATA. act the furious counsels by which he was conti- nually stimulated to severities against them. These were so far successful, that while pro- testant writers have, on the strength of them, claimed her for their own, and represent her a~s expressly raised by God as "a shield to his persecuted servants," a more unsuspicious style of witnesses, the enemies of the Reformation,, accuse her (even while attempting to prove her own Catholicism untainted) of having, by her mistaken compassion, prevented the utter ex- tinction of Lutheranism in France ; which, but for her, they scruple not to add, would have been strangled in its very cradle. From the same reluctant source we learn, that she not only opened her house and territories to the banished and persecuted reformers of France, but educated several at her own expense, in fo- reign seminaries; to which, in times of distress, she so far extended her liberalities, as to send to Geneva, on one occasion, a charitable donation of 4000 francs. But, perhaps, a more honourable proof still, in the eyes of protestants, and more unpardon- able in those of catholics, was the actual pub- lication, by this accomplished princess, of a HER TIMES. 47 book of devotion, called the " Mirror of a sin- ful soul ;" in which there occurred, (to the pious horror of the latter,) no mention either of saints, or merits, or purgatory, save only in the blood of Jesus Christ ; nay, where even the prayer called " Salve Regina," commonly dedicated to the Virgin, was, in her native language, ap- plied to the Saviour Himself. For this work she had the honour of being censured by the Sor- bonne ; and it required all the authority and partiality of her royal brother, to avert more serious consequences. When we add, that she furnished Paris, at her own cost, with a succession of able preachers " almost," if not altogether, " Christian," while at her own castle of Pau, not only was true preaching constantly heard, but even the cele- bration of the Eucharist, according to the pri- mitive apostolic institution, actually witnessed in those secret vaults under the castle, formerly contrived for the concealment of earthly trea- sures, we can have little scruple, notwithstand- ing some blame-worthy outward conformity to catholic rites, to number among the " honour- able women," who, in the times of which we are 48 OLYMPIA MORATA. writing, did homage to the truth the amiable, learned, and able Margaret of Navarre. In a woman endowed with qualities so lofty and masculine, as to make her not only (as all authors agree) of the greatest utility to her brother in his government, but to induce him, during his captivity after the battle of Pavia, to appoint her, in case of his mother's death, regent of the king- dom it is delightful to trace the most ami- able feelings of sisterly affection. These were fully proved by her arduous journey into Spain, to attend on and console her sick and captive bro- ther ; whose imprisonment she narrowly escaped sharing, in consequence of the intrepidity with which she had pleaded his cause with the em- peror and his ministers, and reproached their inhumanity and want of Christian courtesy. It had been privately determined to arrest her on her return to France, the instant her safe con- duct should expire, a treachery which she, with her usual spirit and address, defeated, by performing the fatiguing journey on horseback, in half the usual time ; and reaching, late in the evening of the very day in question, the frontiers of her own beloved country. From this sisterly HER TIMES. 49 and amiable conduct arose those strong claims on Francis's gratitude and affection, which, in the counsels of Providence, were made the in- strument of averting, from the reformed of France that fierceness of persecution under which at least according to the opinion of their disappointed enemies they must otherwise have been extinguished. Not only did Renee owe to this kindred spirit the acquaintance of Calvin, and the be- nefit which (according to Theodore Beza) she derived fro'm his faithful ministrations, during upwards of a year's sojourn at Ferrara ; but it was to the Queen of Navarre that this eminent man was himself indirectly indebted for his own early knowledge and adoption of the reformed opinions : as it was from a German professor of Greek whom she had invited (on the score of his Lutheranism) to the city of Bourges, that he im- bibed at once the rudiments of that language, and of protestantism . Endowed by nature with admirable talents, he had been originally educated for the church of Rome, under which he even, in his youth, en- joyed benefices; but having, (probably from the lessons received at Bourges,) on his father's 50 OLYMPIA MORATA. death, disposed of his church preferments, he re- paired to Paris, to pursue his studies in theology, and the Hebrew and Chaldee languages. Here he was introduced to the personal notice of the Queen of Navarre, whose well-known opinions already drew around her all of the same way of thinking, and who lent a partial ear to his discourse. But this good fortune did not last long. All Lutherans being banished from Paris by Francis the First, Calvin was obliged to re- treat, first to the provinces, where he subsisted by teaching Greek ; and finally to Basle, where Erasmus (according to catholic authorities) predicted the future peril to the church of Rome from the young man she had brought up in her bosom. After residing once more under the protection of the Queen of Navarre, he returned to Basle, where he published his Institutes. From thence he proceeded to Ferrara, " possessed," says his biographer, " with an earnest desire to see the Duchess Renee," whose faith, and that of her household, he strengthened by his instructions ; till once more driven forth, by the storm of do- mestic persecution by which that household was dispersed. The protestant reader will translate HER TIMES. 51 (as we have already done other catholic vitu- perations) that fastened upon Calvin, of having " put the finishing stroke to the fatal perver- sion of mind of the Duchess of Ferrara," into the more Christian language of having com- pleted, by his assiduous ministrations, the con- version of that illustrious lady ; though it does not appear that either she, or her protegee Olympia, ever adopted his peculiar tenets in preference to the Lutheran one? they had previ- ously imbibed. But protestantism was not yet a thing of shades and differences, but a " turning from darkness into light," " a passing from death unto life." No sooner did controversy usurp the place of scriptural truth, and disunion weaken what persecution failed to shake, than the fabric of the Reformation every where tottered to its base ; and a return of the reign of darkness and error, in many parts of the lately illumined reli- gious horizon, became fatally facilitated. It is impossible for the distant and dispassion- ate spectator of that " wordy war" that com- bat for names, not essentials, which so early rent and marred the unity of the blessed Reforma- tion not to marvel at the possibility, and mourn E2 52 DLYMfIA MORATA. over the occurrence of divisions, which afforded to the common enemy the sole strong point in his otherwise hopeless cause; and by which, like the numerous nameless channels, that have robbed the noble Rhine of the glory of rolling its un- broken waves to the ocean protestantism has been deprived of the mighty influence with which, if united in doctrine and spirit, she might long since have swept the feeble barriers of error and superstition resistlessly before her. Among the various professors of the reformed tenets, who visited Ferrara, during the early years of Olympia, and who, from that circum- stance, might have some influence in forming her tastes, was the famous Clement Marot, like her- self a court favourite, and poet to Anne of Brit- tany and King Francis the First, and who, like herself, was induced, by his adoption of a purer faith, to employ his poetical powers in a version of the psalms. Attached to the suite of the Princess Margaret (afterwards Queen of Na- varre,) he followed her first husband, the Duke d'Alenc,on, to the battle of Pavia, where he was wounded and taken prisoner, along with his illustrious master. On his return to France, he was imprisoned on suspicion of protestantism, HER TIMES. 53 and though he, at that time, escaped by the interposition of the king, he was so much alarmed as to take refuge with his old mistress, the Queen of Navarre, (the faithful protectress of all perse- cuted Hugonots,) by whom he was strongly re- commended to the Duchess of Ferrara, who made him her secretary, and took great pleasure in his conversation. His version of the psalms in metre, afterwards completed by the celebrated Theodore Beza, was the earliest translation into the French language ; and adopted for more than a century by all the Reformed churches, until that of Geneva alone, in 1695, exchanged it for a more modern one.* It forms a singular feature in the history of this earliest version of the psalms in a modern lan- guage, that it was dedicated to, and continued, at the desire of Francis the First, a zealous ca- tholic, by whom it was subsequently prohibited ; and contemporary historians have left us many * A French Testament of 1543, with the Psalms of Marot se.t to music annexed to it, is in the possession of the author, who is led to think it rare, from the earliest publication of this psalter being ascribed by Bayle to the year 1545. Two specimens of this primitive church music are given in the Appendix. 54 OLYMPIA MORATA. curious particulars of the indiscriminating avi- dity, which both catholics and protestants testified for the new species of sacred poetry, and the eager adaptation of it (but with- out the slightest idea of irreverence) to the airs of the most popular profane ballads of the day.* Francis, who was fond of singing, himself set to music the hundred and twenty-eighth psalm ; while Henry the Second made the hunt- ing-field ring with his favourite, " As pants the hart ;" and the Queen, the royal mistress, and the King of Navarre, all chose separate ones, suited to their various circumstances, adapting them, as was mentioned before, to any air which the measure happened to suit. The per- * A striking proof how little associations, which to us seem hardly short of blasphemous, were thus regarded at the period of which we are writing, occurs in the solemn decla- ration of religion put forth by Henry the Eighth of England to his subjects, in which, (among other matters of exultation,) it is boasted, that " the Bible is now in almost every man's hand, instead of the old fabulous and phantastical books of the Table Round, Launcelot du Lac, Huon de Bourdeaux, and Guy of Warwick, &c., whose impure filth and vain fabulosity the Light of God has abolished utterly !" Paper Office, A. D. 1539. Collier's History of the Church. HER TIMES. 55 scented King of Navarre's began very appro- priately : " Revenge moi, prens ma querelle." No sooner, however, had these divine songs, after a reign of court favour, which they seem to have owed entirely to their vast superiority over the idle ballads they superseded, been in- corporated with the prohibited ritual of Geneva, than the use of them became synonymous with heresy ; and to sing a psalm, equivalent to con- viction of Lutheranism, at a court where, a short time before, to join in them in public, formed the favourite recreation of its most elegant and ac- complished members. A more Christian and valuable testimony to their merit and efficacy is, however, left us, under the hand of Theodore Beza, who completed the pious work of Marot. He thus writes in 1581, in a paraphrase on the Psalter : " It is now exactly thirty-two years, since I heard, for the first time, this ninety-first psalm sung in a Christian assembly ; and I may truly say, I heard it with such delight, on so good an occa- sion, that I have ever since borne it engraved on my heart." It is not improbable, that during Marot's visit to Ferrara, the closet of the pious Renee 56 OLYMPIA MORATA. resounded, for the first time also, with the songs of Zion ; in which Olympia, Anne de Parthenai, and other ladies of a court, renowned for skill in music, may have borne no unworthy part.* The friend of Marot, Lyon Jamet, a man of similar religious opinions, and of sound ability, to whom some ascribe a secret mission, as me- diator on the part of Henry the Second, between the Duke of Ferrara and the pope, joined him at the court of Renee, and remained, after Marot's return to France, in the capacity of her secretary. We have thus briefly noticed the share (no inconsiderable one) which accomplished foreign refugees from persecution numbering among their distinguished band the great Calvin him- self had in repaying, by the inestimable benefits of spiritual illumination, the temporal protection * So celebrated was Ferrara for the study and cultivation of music, that Benvenuto Cellini, the famous Florentine, mentions, in one sentence, as among its most distinguished ornaments, the Cardinals Salviati and Accolti, and the " connoisseurs in music." His biographer tells us that, be- sides the eminent masters in the art who flourished at Fer- rara, Anna and Lucretia, the daughters of Rene, were (in addition to their profounder studies) its successful and dis- tinguished cultivators. Roscoe's Benvenuto Cellini. HER TIMES. 57 extended to thembyRenee. We must now, under the united guidance of the able historian of the Italian Reformation, and of the learned biogra- pher of Olympia Morata, cast a rapid glance over the galaxy of native and foreign talent, which that princess, with the laudable purpose of perfecting the education of her children (an object by which the co-operation of her husband was, in the first instance, secured) succeeded in attracting, either transiently or permanently, to Ferrara. The offspring, for whose instruction so able a parent thus judiciously provided, were, in every respect, worthy of her care ; and united to a degree of personal beauty, which caused a con- temporary to remark, that Renee, in spite of her defective shape, had made Hercules the father of " five of the finest children in Christendom," of the most promising talents and virtuous dispo- sitions. Alfonso, the eldest, who succeeded to the dukedom, became one of the most munificent and polished princes in Italy; and testified, by a patronage of letters, the sole blot in which was the inexplicable imprisomnent of Tasso, how 58 OLYMPIA MORATA. deeply he was imbued with the spirit of the liberal education thus afforded him. Louis, the younger, became the third of the celebrated cardinals of his illustrious house ; and although, unfortunately too early removed from his mother's influence to partake of her purer faith, did honour to that he had embraced, by a piety, gentleness, and benevolence of dis- position, which rendered him as generally be- loved and respected, as his more splendid and worldly uncles, in the Conclave, had been courted and panegyrized. Of Anna, the eldest daughter, the special as- sociate and fellow-student of Olympia Morata, we shall have occasion to speak more at large ; and commemorate her adherence to those lessons of Christian charity and sympathy, at least, towards the victims to the faith she had imbibed in the cradle, so carefully instilled by the ex- ample of her mother, and the gentle counsels of her admirable foster-sister. The " obliquity" of mind, and leaning to protestantism to which these lessons gave rise, are thus quaintly but forcibly expressed by an old writer : " The Duke of Ferrara was not dextrous enough to hinder HER TIMES. 59 Anne of Este, his daughter, from being tainted with the new opinions. Her mother, who caused her to be brought up to learning, gave her as a companion in her studies, Olympia Morata, a young lady of great parts, who was afterwards a good Lutheran," &c. Of the second daughter, Lucretia, who mar- ried the Duke of Urbino, little has been re- corded ; while the chief immortality of the third, the beautiful Leonora, who died unmarried, has been derived from the devotion unauthorized, indeed, and presumptuous, but according to the chivalrous custom of the times, neither criminal nor unprecedented of the unfortunate Tasso ; the immediate pretext for whose imprisonment, is generally supposed to have been afforded by some ill-judged public testimony of so aspiring a passion. That the homage of so distinguished a votary of the Muse, was neither resented by, nor un- acceptable to its object, we may gather from the circumstance, that after both had arrived at an age, when the levities of youth, especially if tinged with aught of dishonour, are reflected on with anything but complacency, the harassed and necessitous bard, in making his will, ex- 60 OLYMPIA MORATA. presses a confident hope, that if his already pledged scanty personal effects should prove inadequate to the discharge of his debts, and the pious purpose of marking with a stone the site of his father's grave the princess Leonora, for the good-will and regard she bears his me- mory, will make good the deficiency. It is a curious coincidence, that almost all the recorded attachments of private individuals, to ladies of royal blood, should have been ex- piated by the longest and most rigorous cap- tivities on record ; from that of Tasso, by far the most innocent, and founded, apparently, on mere chivalrous admiration of superior excel- lence to the more ambitious and interested pre- tensions of the Duke de Lauzun to the hand of Mademoiselle of France and the boyish passion of the unfortunate Baron Trenck for the princess Amelia of Prussia. The result of a meeting in the evening of life, between the latter pair of lovers when the prison-bleached locks of the one, and the faded brow of the other, are said to have startled and dispelled visions of tender- ness, founded on youthful romance and personal advantages alone confirms the conjecture above hazarded, as to the more honourable and less HER TIMES. 61 evanescent character of the devotion of Tasso, for which he seems to challenge a duration be- yond the grave. But to return to the promise of talent, ex- hibited even in childhood, by those whose future destinies we have been unconsciously led to pursue a striking proof of its precocity is left us, in the circumstance that, " in the year 1543 during a visit which Pope Paul the Third paid to Ferrara, theAdelphi of Terence was acted by the youth of the family ; and the three daugh- ters of the duke, the eldest of whom was only twelve, and the youngest five years of age, per- formed their parts with great applause."* That we may form a higher estimate of the importance and splendour of a pageant, in which the residence at court, and superior classical attainments of our heroine, in all probability, made her a performer we have only to refer to the gorgeous account given by Sismondi, in his Literature of the South, of similar theatrical re- presentations, as then conducted at the Italian courts. " About the year 1470," says he, " the academy of learned men and poets at Rome * M'Crie's History of the Reformation in Italy. 62 OLYMPIA MORATA. undertook, for the better revival of the ancients, to represent, in Latin, some of the comedies of Plautus. The taste for theatrical performances was renewed with great eagerness, as it was regarded as an essential part of classical an- tiquity. " The sovereigns who, at this epoch, placed all their glory in the protection of letters and the arts, endeavoured to surpass each other in erecting, on occasions of solemnity, a theatre, often for the purpose of a single representation.* The scholars of the court disputed for the honour of the parts, in the performance of the piece, which was sometimes translated from the Greek or Latin, sometimes the production of a modern poet. Italy boasted of exhibiting, annually, two theatrical representations ; the one at Ferrara, the other at Milan, Rome, or * A more permanent monument to the magnificence of these classical entertainments exists in the Olympic Theatre of Palladio at Vicenza, built on the exact model of those of the ancients, and which appeared to the writer admirably calculated for scenic representation. Its stage decorations, instead of being painted on canvas, are solidly constructed of wood, and represent, with great accuracy of perspective, five long streets, terminating in a handsome piazza. HER TIMES. 63 Naples. All the neighbouring princes, within reach, repaired thither with their courts and retinue. The magnificence of the spectacle, the enormous cost, and the gratitude of the public, for an unbought pleasure, disarmed the severe judgment of the audience. The records of the Italian cities, in presenting to us the recollection of these representations, speak of them always in terms of unqualified admiration.* " But little," remarks Dr. M'Crie, " did the bigotted pontiff, who," on the occasion above, alluded to, " so highly admired the proficiency of the juvenile princesses, as yet suspect the religious doctrines of the masters, by whom they had been qualified for affording him this clas- sical amusement." Of these, it is time to speak, and the detail may derive additional interest from the little-known fact, mentioned by Dr. M'Crie, " that there were, in the beginning of the sixteenth century, so many English students at the university of Ferrara, as to form a dis- tinct nation in that learned corporation." Then and there may perhaps have been laid the foundation of some of those Christian friendships, * SismoDdi Literature du Midi. 64 OLYMPIA MORATA. which, somewhat later, led to the emigration to, and sweetened the residence in England of several distinguished Italian reformers ; whose first shelter from persecution was found at the court of Ferrara. The University of Ferrara was endowed by the Emperor Frederick the Second, and en- joyed, for centuries after its foundation, a well- merited reputation. Misson says it was famous for the number of great men it had produced ; and truly there are names connected with it well calculated to do honour to the literature of their native city. Among these, perhaps the most celebrated, and the one whose labours have most perma- nently benefited the temporal interests of man- kind, was the famous Lilio Gregorio Giraldi, whom De Thou and others represent as the most learned man of his age. It is said that Pope Gregory the Thirteenth was guided, in his Re- formation of the Calendar, by the calculations of this deeply scientific man ; whose memory ,- according to his friend and contemporary, Al- berti, was so astonishing, that he never forgot anything which he had once read over. A hand- some monument in the cathedral amply attests HER TIMES. 65 the estimation in which he was held by his countrymen ; and it is no small testimony to the learning and merits of Olympia Morata, that he should have been numbered among those of her correspondents, in whom her studies and pur- suits excited the liveliest interest. " You will learn with pleasure," she writes to him, (after having quitted Ferrara,) " that I am very happy ; spending the whole day with the Muses, having no other occupation to withdraw me from them, except my studies in divinity, to which I always return with yet greater delight and advantage." Whether the protestant opinions entertained by Olympia and so many other distinguished persons at Ferrara were adopted by Giraldi, does not exactly appear ; though the allusion to religion in the above extract favours the suppo- sition. It is also doubtful whether (like most of the other literati) he had a direct share in the education of the royal pupils; respecting whose proficiency, two of the most celebrated of them, Aonio Paleario (of whom we shall have to speak farther) and Bartolomeo Ricci, thus ex- change mutual felicitations. The former asks "Is it not a legitimate 66 OLYMPIA MORATA. subject of exultation, that the daughter of a powerful monarch, and the wife of our great Duke, should have entered so deeply into our studies, as to have acquired high excellence ; and that Anna and Lucretia, the golden off- spring of Renee, should prosecute, in Greek and Latin, the most abstruse sciences ?" To which, Ricci replies " What you write is most true of my princesses, who are the most learned, as well as the most noble, of women. Well do I know that they are highly educated, that they far surpass others of their own age, and have established themselves in the highest place of literature." Among the learned and accomplished persons to whom, under the patronage of Renee, the cause of literature and that of protestantism (though without any open profession of the latter) were alike indebted, was Pier Angelo Manzolli, chief physician to the Duke, and better known by his assumed name of Palin- genius. Under the latter, he published those satirical works, (one, especially, entitled " The Zodiac of Life,") the severe reflections in which on the errors of Rome have caused Reforming historians to assign him a place among the de- HER. TIMES. 67 fenders of those tenets at the court of Ferrara ; while they procured, for the volume itself, a place in the index of prohibited books, and for the bones of the author, the honour of being disinterred, and burnt as those of a heretic. The same suspicions of Lutheranism, and posthumous desecration of his remains, are said to have been the portion of Marc Antonio Fla- minio, the son of a celebrated Latin professor at Bologna, and himself one of the most learned men, and most elegant poets, of his time. Among his poetical works, was a Latin version of the Psalms, and an epitaph on Savonarola, (by some styled the Italian Luther,) much ad- mired by contemporaries, and pretty conclusive as to the author's own adherence to similar opi- nions. The following is a literal version : " While the fierce flames fed on the joints of Hieronymus, Religion, having torn off her sacred tresses, Wept, and said, ' Oh ! spare me, ye cruel flames, Spare me ! my very vitals are on that burning pile !' " The biographer of Olympia collects innumer- able testimonies to the soundness of the general views on religion of Flaminio. Scultetus, in his Annals of the Reformation, says, " When F 2 68 OLYMPIA MORATA. Renee, daughter of Louis the Twelfth of France, and wife of Duke Hercules of Este, illuminated the darkness of Italy itself by the light of reli- gion, there flourished at Ferrara, among other friends of the Gospel, Marc Antonio Flaminio." The extent of his protestantism has been questioned, and it is undoubtedly true that it was somewhat restrained and obscured by a natural timidity of disposition, as well as by the temporizing counsels of that arch renegade, our own Cardinal Pole, his intimate friend, and once among the most zealous concealed favour- ers of the Reformed opinions. Yet not only do the writings of Flaminio abundantly corroborate the leading doctrines of the Gospel, but he gave a still more decided proof of attachment to them by declining, on that very ground, the honour- able employment of secretary to the Council of Trent. As, therefore, the account of his subse- quent re-conversion rests on none but catholic authorities, it is to be presumed it is fictitious the more so, as his works were entirely prohi- bited, and the intention, at least, of disinterring and dishonouring his remains was positively en- tertained at Rome. What chiefly lends interest in the eye of the HER TIMES. 69 English reader to the history of this amiable and accomplished man, is his intimacy with, and the influence exercised on him by Pole, by which he and several other Italian converts were robbed of the glory which would have attached to a decided and consistent profession of the Gospel. And truly has England cause to blush for her degenerate son, as well as to weep tears of blood over that selection of an agent of papal tyranny, which not only fastened the stain of apostacy on one of her own children, but un- doubtedly facilitated, by the natural influence which, as such, he possessed, the return of an emancipated people to the most galling of spi- ritual servitudes. Surely, in the private mo- ments of the proud cardinal, the pompous papal brief by which he was constituted the arch-per- secutor of those pure doctrines to which his unso- phisticated mind had, in earlier days, yielded not only assent, but countenance and of some of his most familiar Italian associates, whom the tyranny introduced by him drove out of Eng- land must have seemed a badge of infamy rather than a subject of exultation ! It is thus mourned over by an Italian author quoted by Dr. M'Crie : " O wretched cardinal ! 70 OLYMPIA MORATA. miserable despiser of the truth ! The purity of religion had been restored in England the doctrines of justification by faith and true re- pentance, were taught in this kingdom. Pole went thither, and what was the consequence? He absolved the whole nation, including the king and queen on their throne, from the crimes they had committed against the church of Rome ; and what were these ? Adherence to the very doctrines which he himself had fa- voured, and pretended to secure by the arts of moderation and prudent delay. Nor did he rest until, to gratify the pope, he had restored all the abuses and superstitions which had been abolished, and had sent a printed account of his deeds through every country in Europe !" But enough of our recreant countryman, and of those doubtful characters among the Italians who, (like one of the correspondents of the father of our heroine), were content to " hold the truth for themselves ; regardless alike of the personal evils of dissimulation, and of the duty of recommending by example, the doctrines they internally admired. Turn we to the more pleasing task of accompanying the biographer of Olympia, aided by the further invaluable HER TIMES. 71 lights afforded by Dr. M'Crie,* in his survey of those confessors at least, if not martyrs to the truth, by whom, in conjunction with the short-lived success of the Reformation in Fer- rura, the cultivation, intellectual and religious, of a mind so exalted, was either directly or inci- dentally promoted. And deep are the obligations owed by general readers female ones especially, to a pen, which has rescued from the comparative obli- vion of a learned language, invaluable speci- mens of the solidity and purity of that " faith, once delivered to the saints," which, with little in the beginning of personal concert, these men of the highest intellectual refinement and cul- tivation contrived, nearly about the same time, to extract (each for himself) from the newly- opened fountain of vernacular holy writ. There is something inexpressibly delightful and confirmatory to the sincere Christian, in tracing, in these preciously resuscitated narratives, the universal effect simultaneously, and, as we have before said, separately produced on such a multi- tude of superior minds, by the study of unadul- * M'Crie's History of the Reformation in Italy. 72 OLYMPIA MORATA. terated Scripture, either in their own or in the various original languages, versions of which had, recently, (with a rapidity betokening awakened attention to the subject), succeeded each other!* By these, they were not only in the first instance directed, but, as they proceeded in their enqui- ries, to borrow the forcible expression of St. Paul, " shut up into the faith ;" as if Scripture, fairly and dispassionately investigated, left no alternative to minds unbiassed by interest or pre- judice, in interpreting its obvious dictates. The fact, that some, or even many of those thus far enlightened, either paused in mere indolence on the threshold of conversion, or (like our own countryman, Pole) actually drew back into perdition, at the powerful bidding of * The first edition of the Septuagint came from the Aldine press in 1518. In 1516, Erasmus published, at Basle, his edition of the Greek text of the New Testament, to which his fame gave an extensive currency in Italy. And, in 1527, Paginini, of Lucca, published his Latin translation of the whole Bible, which had excited great expectation, from the reputation which the author enjoyed as a Hebrew scholar, and its being known that he had spent above twenty-five years on the work. M'Crie's History. HER TIMES. 73 interest or ambition strengthens rather than in- validates the evidence afforded to scriptural truth by their previous unsophisticated adoption of it; and such examples, (happily rare ones,) of dis- simulation or defection, serve but to heighten, tenfold, that " perseverance of the saints," amid contumely, expatriation, and, in many cases, martyrdom, of which every page of the history of the Italian reformation, displays abundant and honourable proofs. In glancing over, and gleaning from those pages, a few of their most interesting particulars connected with Ferrara, and, consequently, with the main design of this tributary memorial ; it may not be presumptuous to hope that other fe- males, may have (like its accomplished and amiable subject) their minds expanded, and their piety strengthened, by the record of the opinions, lives and sufferings of the Italian con- verts to protestantism. Among these, the place of honour may, per- haps, without impropriety, be here assigned to the father of our heroine ; both as her own ear- liest instructor in religion and literature, and as one of the first and ablest among those who es- poused at Ferrara the reformed opinions. 74 OLYMPIA MORATA. Fulvio Peregrine Morata was a native of Man- tua, who, as his daughter's biographer quaintly but forcibly expresses it, " had eagerly imbibed the doctrines of the Gospel, then bursting out in the greatest purity, and flowing into the re- gions of Italy ; and, having tasted its sweetness, gave to others to drink of it, as of the purest water." He had acquired the principles of Scriptural truth from Celio Secundo Curio, who, driven from his native country of Piedmont, took refuge at the court of Renee, and under the roof of Morata ; whose hospitality he richly repaid by that introduction to the pure faith of the Gospel, which his learned convert has, in two different letters, gratefully commemorated. In one, he thus addresses Curio : " Farewell ! best instrument and chosen vessel for the glory of God!" and, in the other, he says, " It would have been truly a sad event for me to be deprived of my divine preceptor, sent to me by God himself for my instruction and edification. I do not believe that Ananias, the master of Paul, taught him to know Christ with more holy admonitions than thou hast bestowed on me." Nor were these pious cares unrewarded by the richest success. " Morata," says the same au- HER TIMES. 75 thor above quoted,* " adorned with many vir- tues, but, above all, with the indispensable one of sincerity, finally attained to the knowledge of the truth he so eagerly desired." Celio himself says ""that he was a man excelling in doctrine and good works, in whom existed all the friend- ship and hospitality of ancient days." His re- maining letters are said by contemporaries to "breathe the very odour of piety;" and his temporary adoption of some doctrinal errors then prevalent, especially the belief that " before he prayed to God, he ought to know whether he was elected from all eternity," were soonjdis- pelled by the forcible reasoning of his able, though only partially converted, friend Cal- cagnini.f * Noltenii Vita Olympiae. t The refutation above alluded to, and still more, one ad- dressed subsequently by Olympia herself to the Princess Ursini, are so sound, that we cannot resist extracting them from the notes of her biographer. The former says that " the gifts of predestination, surpassing the comprehension of mor- tals, as being hid in the impervious recesses of the divine foreknowledge, are best passed over in silence." But Olympia, a far deeper Scriptural student, quotes the universality of the Gospel promises, as a ground for laying aside the opinion above ascribed to her father, which she characterizes as an 76 OLYMPIA MORATA. The testimony of this writer (himself a man of deep erudition) to the learning and secular vir- tues of Morata, is equally decisive. After hav- ing honorably and successfully discharged the functions of private tutor to the two brothers of Duke Hercules the Second (one of them after- wards the celebrated Cardinal Hippolito*), as well as those of Latin professor in the University of Ferrara, he was exposed to much unmerited opposition and obloquy. Being beloved equally by the prince and his pupils, his extreme good fortune gave rise to envy and malice ; and the calumnies consequently spread against him oc- casioned him to banish himself in disgust and indignation from the place. It was upon this half voluntary retreat to Venice, that the follow- " ancient error." Instead of perplexing anxieties about elec- tion, she earnestly recommends faith in the plain invitations of Scripture, and fervent prayer to their Author, as the surest tests of personal salvation. * Ippolito di Este, son of Alfonso Duke of Ferrara, was elected Archbishop of Milan at fifteen years of age ! Faithful to the ruling bias of his family, Ippolito persevered in patron- izing artists and learned men, in whose company he was ac- customed to relax his mind from the vexatious and tedious cares of state. Roscoe's Benvenuto Cellini. HER TIMES. 77 ing flattering testimonies to the affection and respect of his quondam pupils, were addressed to him by his friend Calcagnini. " All the good and learned of Ferrara love and admire you, and are of opinion that in your departure the city will sustain a severe loss; for most of the young men who attended your instructions are greatly dissatisfied with the other teachers ; ingenuously confessing that none among them can be compared with your- self." In accordance with this opinion, the learned Canon used all his influence to procure the re- call of his friend ; and the innocence of Morata being fully proved, and his detractors silenced, he was permitted, in 1539, to resume his pro- fessorship at Ferrara. His forced sojourn at Venice, disastrous as it must have seemed in a worldly point of view, and accompanied as it was by personal apprehensions sufficiently strong to induce him to pass there by a feigned name may have conduced, in no small degree, to his religious illumination and growth in grace ; for, during its continuance, Venice was favored with that truly scriptural preaching of the celebrated Ochino, the extraordinary sensation caused by 78 OLYMPIA MORATA. which, even in minds less happily prepared than Morata's for the reception of Gospel truth, we shall ere long have occasion to remark. The chief joy of Fulvio on revisiting Ferrara, was no doubt his reunion with his excellent wife and promising family ; of whom Olympia, the eldest, was now of an age to profit by, and of talents richly to repay, his efforts for her educa- tion. On these, or on their happy result, which at the early age of twelve, introduced her to that court of which she was so distinguished an or- nament, it would be premature at present to enter. Suffice it that a letter addressed to her at this time, on that science of declamation in which she became so early a proficient, abun- dantly testifies his ability as a teacher, and zeal as a parent ; while to his knowledge of general literature numerous monuments remain in the erudite correspondence between him and his before quoted friend Calcagnini. This learned person was a canon of the ca- thedra] at Ferrara, a poet, and an orator. He was well versed in languages, and wrote volumi- nous Latin works ; but is thought less felicitous in his prose style than in verse, of which he has left elegant specimens. His correspondence with HER TIMES. 79 eminent persons, among others, with Morata ,ts well as treatises, in some of which singularly acute conjectures are hazarded on the lately revived subject of Egyptian hieroglyphics suf- ficiently attest his vast erudition. He left his library, which, from his multifarious quotations must have been extensive, to the Dominican convent of Ferrara, where he was buried. Though, by thus dying in communion with the church of Rome, this eminent scholar has for- feited, like many others of his day, the rank of a declared professor of protestantism, the sound religious sentiments already quoted, along with many other similar passages, bear witness, that, on fundamental points, he shared the views of his intimate friend and correspondent, Morata. His distinguished favour at the court where his youth was passed, as well as strict private friend- ship with the parents of our heroine (the title of whose godfather he eagerly claims) assign him a double place, in the sketch of the former and biography of the latter. The immediate care of instructing in literature, and, by a happy coincidence, in scriptural re- ligion, also, the royal children of Ferrara, was intrusted to the brothers Sinapii, German pro- 80 OLYMPIA MORATA. testant physicians ; whose superior knowledge of languages led to their appointment as pro- fessors in the university of that city. Of these excellent men we shall have occasion subse- quently to speak ; and as their connexion with Italy was accidental and transient, while that with our heroine was permanent, and cemented by the tenderest Christian friendship in their na- tive country, we shall confine ourselves at pre- sent to their eminent qualifications as teachers ; of which, as well as of the success that in this instance attended their labours, ample proof is left us by the biographer of Olympia, and many contemporary authorities. Of Chilian Sinapius, Thuanus speaks highly in his history of his own times, and having, like his brother, quitted Fer- rara for the free exercise of the protestant faith, he became professor of medicine at Spires in Germany. Of John Sinapius, to whom the peculiar friend- ship by which he was united to his townsman, the husband of Olympia, will induce us hereafter to recur suffice it at present to say, that she and her royal fellow-students were fortunate in an instructor, of whom his biographer says, that " by his eloquence and learning he acquired the HER TIMES. 81 favour and respect of many, among others of the emperor Charles the Fifth. Celio Curio styles him " that most eminent man;" and Melchior Adam, in his Lives of the German physicians and philosophers, tells us that " from a boy he \s i> a most zealous student in literature ; and when he went to Italy, he was received and be- loved by the greatest and most learned men of his time. His principal sojourn," says he, " was at Ferrara, where he was appointed preceptor to Anne of Este and her friend Olympia Morata." Fortunately for his pupils, he seems to have re- fused a pressing invitation to return to his native country, so early as 1536. Camerarius thus notices it in a letter to A. Niger. " Sinapius has been called to our city, but has declined. He probably does not wish to exchange the wealth of Italy for our poverty, and he does wisely." This circumstance, and the opinion formed on it by a contemporary man of letters, are chiefly noticed, to prove the extent of the sacrifice, which some years later Sinapius cheer- fully made, by quitting Ferrara, when his in- terest and religious profession became incom- patible ; a sacrifice which, like many of those made for conscience sake, was, even in this o 82 OLYMPIA MOKATA. world, rewarded by brilliant appointments at the courts of his native countay. But it was not thus, alas ! with his amiable as well as able Italian coadjutor, in the grateful task of the tuition of such pupils as Anne of Este and Olympia Morata, the famous Aonio Paleario whose far higher claims, as a sound divine and Christian martyr, entitle him to so honourable a place in the records of his country. On a footing of intimacy with its most learned individuals, he is said to have been himself one of the best men and best writers of his time. About the year 1534, he was appointed public teacher of Greek and Latin to the University of Sienna; and though still in communion with the church of Rome, was exposed by the opi- nions acquired in the study of the Scriptures, and works of the German reformers, to suspicion of heresy, and a consequent load of obloquy, of the justice of which the following extract from x>ne of his own letters will enable us to judge. " Cotta asserts that if I am allowed to live .there will not be a vestige of religion left in this city ; and why ? Because being asked one day what was the chief ground on which men should rest their salvation, I replied ' Christ: ' being HER TIMES. 83 asked what was the second, I replied ' Christ ; ' and being asked what was the third, I replied Christ!'"* The chief cause, indeed, of his persecution, was a work entitled the " Benefits of the Death of Christ," his manly and convincing defence of which before the Senate of Sienna, for a while refuted the calumnies of his adversaries. He was, however, soon after obliged to quit that city, and being subsequently offered by the magistrates a professorship of eloquence, with a splendid salary, took up his residence at Milan. It was probably in the interval, that, while a harassed wanderer, his talents as a teacher were exercised at the sheltering court of the Duchess of Ferrara ; of whose proficiency, and that of her daughters, in classical pursuits, the opinion of ttis eminent scholar and truly amiable man, has already been recorded. The particulars of his imprisonment at Rome, and ultimate mar- tyrdom under Pius the Fifth, are so affectingly given by Dr. M'Crie, that it would be superflu- ous to repeat them here. Suffice it, that the flames which consumed, at the ripe age of seventy, his earthly tabernacle, were power- * M'Crie's History of the Italian Reformation. 84 OLYMPIA MORATA. less alike against his constancy and his writings. Of the former, the best testimony is to be found in the beautiful letters which, before his execu- tion, he addressed to his wife and children ; while of the latter, his great work especially, on the Benefits of Christ's Death, forty thousand copies were sold in six years.* Who shall dare to estimate the moral effects on its witnesses, of one conscientious and mildly- encountered martyrdom for the truth ? or who would be inclined to question the importance of the Italian reformation, had its sole achievement been the above circulation of a work, breathing the very essence of Gospel purity? But the pages of its historian are rich in similar records, and reluctantly must we confine ourselves to a few illustrious refugees for the cause of Protest- antism at the Court of Ferrara; the possible in- fluence of two of whom, on the religion of in- dividuals there, is enhanced to the English reader by their close connection with that of England, * That it was translated, even in Scotland, appears from a note to the new edition of Dr. M'Crie's work, with which the writer has been favoured. The Testament of an Edinburgh printer, deceased in 1577, contains the following item. " Foure Benefite of Christ, the price 2 sh:" HER TIMES. 85 where both were for many years honored, and there is reason to believe, eminently useful preachers of the truth. Few of the Italian protestants have enjoyed a more extensive or well-merited reputation than Bernardo Ochino, or as he is sometimes called, Ocello of Sienna whom a deep sense of reli- gion had induced, in early youth, to make trial successively of the discipline of the strictest and most austere monastic orders ; with a view to achieve by mortification and his own strenuous efforts, the attainment of sanctity and salva- tion. Of the utter inadequacy of such endeavours, he has left in his writings a most valuable and interesting record ; as well as of the opposition which his acute mind soon discerned between them, and the spirit of those Scriptures, to which, as a monk, he had free access. The di- ligent study of these, with the blessing of God, soon removed the veil from the understanding and heart of this eminent man ; and it was to his singular gift of preaching, exercised for a long time under the outward garb and protec- tion of the Romish Church, that many of the most eminent contemporaries of Olympia owed 86 OLYMPIA MORATA. their conversion. Such was probably the case with herself also, (for, his death being resolved on at Rome, he fled to Ferrara, where he was protected by the Duchess Renee,) and the affec- tionate veneration which through life Olympia expressed for him, favours the supposition. It is strange to those who have subsequently viewed him as a martyr to persecution, and the object of the most rancorous hatred to the Church of Rome, to observe his unbounded popularity while at Venice, and while his pro- testantism (not from dissimulation, but want of fuller light) was still shrouded under the cowl of a capuchin. Not only did hearers of all ranks and sexes flock as to an inspired oracle, but monarchs, bishops, and cardinals, some of them of the most bigotted character, were transported (they little knew wherefore,) with not merely the eloquence, but the actual doctrine of this as yet unconscious advocate of the Reformation. Charles the Fifth, all haughty and inflexible as he was, said, after hearing him, "That monk would make the stones weep." The renegade Cardinal Pole, and the courtly papal secretary Bembo, extol him to the skies. It is impossible to resist quoting the very words in which the HER TIMES. 87 historian of the Italian reformation records the delight with which (while delivered under the sanction of Catholicism) those its staunchest votaries, hailed the energy and persuasiveness of the " truth as it is in Jesus." Bembo, at whose solicitation Vittoria Colonna, the cele- brated Marchioness of Pescara, with whose talents and accomplishments Europe rung,* but whose bias towards protestantism was afterwards unhappily overcome, had persuaded Ochino to visit Venice, thus writes to her in February, 1539. " I send your highness the extracts of our very reverend Frate Bernardino ; to whom I have listened during the small part of Lent which is over, with a pleasure which I cannot sufficiently express. He discourses in a very different and more Christian manner than any other that has mounted the pulpit in my day, and with more lively charity and love brings forth truths of * Tolomei, one of the most elegant writers of his day, thus terminates a highly laudatory note to this distinguished lady. " I might be superfluous enough to assure you how highly I admire your rare and matchless virtues ; were it not that it would look like a confession of ignorance on my part, or an inference of diminished merit on yours." 88 OLYMPIA MORATA. superior excellence and usefulness.* In the name of the whole city, I send your highness immortal thanks for the favour you have done us, and I especially will ever feel obliged to you."f In a subsequent letter of the 14th April, he speaks still more strongly. " Our Frate Ber- nardino, whom I desire henceforth to call mine as well as yours, is at present adored in this city. There is not a man or woman who does * An entire sermon of Ochino on the then totally new, and, in the Church of Rome, unknown doctrine of " Justification by faith," is given in the Appendix, both on account of its inter- est to English readers, as delivered by one, long a popular London preacher, and for its amazing ability in treating a difficult subject, which it has, in a brief discourse absolutely exhausted. t It is singular that Venice, notwithstanding its short but sharp persecution, (during which the characteristic mode of martyrdom adopted, was by drowning,) should have been more than once favoured with truly apostolic preaching. Our admirable Bishop Bedell, the friend of the learned Sarpi, and himself a good Italian scholar, heard at Venice (near a cen- tury later) a sermon by Fulgentio, which he never forgot. It was on those words of Christ, " Have ye not read in the Scriptures'!" Whence he took occasion to ask, how such a question of our Lord could be answered, in times when the book itself was prohibited 1 HER TIMES. 89 not extol him to "the skies. Oh! what plea- sure! oh! what delight ! oh! what joy has he given ! But I reserve his praises until I meet your Highness ; and, in the mean time, supplicate our Lord to order his life so that it may endure longer to the honor of God, and profit of man, than it can hold out according to the treatment he now gives it."* We shall the less be disposed to wonder at the prodigious sensation created by the truly scriptural preaching of Ochino, if we consider, not only the rarity of the ordinance itself (at least in the vulgar tongue), which was chiefly reserved in catholic countries for the great fes- tivals of the church, but also the style and matter of those ' prediche' with which the sound truths of Gospel doctrine might, even in this comparatively enlightened day, be contrasted in Italy. Compared with the ' old wives' fa- bles,' which may yet, in the nineteenth century, be heard in many country pulpits and of which the sermons of the sixteenth were, of course, mainly composed they must have seemed little short of inspiration ; so completely * M'Crie's History of the Reformation in Italy. 90 OLYMPIA MORATA. (from the time, perhaps, when Paul himself " preached the Gospel at Rome also") had every thing like argument, or addresses to the under- standing, been discarded by the illiterate orators of Italy. Even in the present more fastidious period among all the flood of impassioned addresses to the feelings which it has been the fate of the writer to hear from the Lent preachers of that country never have the " words of truth and soberness" (which she rejoices to learn, on recent authority, are now, though rarely, to be heard) happened to meet her ear. If the true end of preaching be to excite emo- tion of that deep and terrible kind, whose work- ings on the rude and ferocious countenances around her, have made her sensations, as a he- retic in their vicinity, any thing but comfort- able, the declaimers, who, on Good Friday in the churches of Rome, during the supposed mysterious hours of the Saviour's crucifixion, literally harrow the feelings of their organized auditory, are preachers of no common stamp. Yet the protestant feels that this emotion, fran- tic as it is in some, and deep and tearful in others, is as unreal a mockery, and destined HER TIMES. 91 to prove as evanescent as the motley paste- board pageant of guards and executioners, and weeping females (not to mention an object more awfully venerably still !) which, got up for the occasion, will either be cast aside when the ex- hibition is over, or, at best, repose in the con- ventual lumber-room till its annual return. But even the protestant may derive, in the midst of his complacent superiority, a salutary warning 1 from the inference which the able his- torian has drawn from all the zeal and apparent relish for the Gospel exhibited in the foregoing passages, and for the sake of which, indeed, they have chiefly been extracted from his va- luable pages. " How doubtful," says he, " are the warmest feelings excited by hearing the Gospel ! and how do they vary with the ex- ternal circumstances in which the truth is pre- sented to the mind ! Bembo was delighted with the sentiments he heard, as well as with the eloquence with which the preacher advocated them ; and yet the future conduct of the car- dinal leaves us at no loss in determining that he would have felt and spoken very differently had he been told that the doctrine, to which 92 OLYMPIA MORATA. he listened with such devout ravishment, was essentially protestant."* From the unconscious protestantism of Ochino, and of those among his hearers who did not, like him, embrace her in firmness and fide- lity, when the cowl had at length dropped off, and she stood confessed in all her scriptural majesty, the indignant opponent and reprover of Rome it is impossible to avoid reverting to an- other subject of kindred remark, forced on the most careless, by the miscellaneous history of the * Of this we may form some idea from the virulence of expression with which, on Ochino's open conversion, he was addressed (in a letter which will be given at full length by Dr. M'Crie, and with a perusal of which the writer has been favoured) by Tolomei, one of the most esteemed literati of the age, who says, " his ' very flesh crept' on hearing of his defection from Catholicism;" an apostacy which (if true) he thus stigmatizes : "a thing blameable in a man, abhorrent in a Christian, damnable in a monk, and worthy of ana- thema in one pretending to preach the word of God !" Such, in short, as to give rise to suspicion that he who could so act was "no longer a man, but, by sorcery, transformed into a demon ! !" Such, at this period, and on this subject, were the sentiments of a scholar, a gentleman, and a man of the world, and one, moreover, the occasional soundness of whose religious sentiments stamp him ' almost' a Christian. HER TIMES. 93 sixteenth century. We mean the influence ex- ercised on the character and conduct of even the least regenerate minds of the age, by the dissemination of the scriptures in the vulgar tongue, during the short but happy period which intervened between their translation and prohibition by papal authority. Of this a singular instance is related at length, and with so much interest, by a celebrated con- temporary of Olympia Morata, as having hap- pened immediately previous to a pretty long so- journ he made at Ferrara ; that the recital of the circumstances, which must have been familiar to all the accomplished circle of which she formed a part, will, it is hoped, be esteemed a pardonable digression. The well known Florentine, Benvenuto Cel- lini, the prince of goldsmiths, as he has been called, and whom posterity has ranked, from his many splendid works in bronze as well as silver, in the far higher class of eminent artists, was, perhaps, fully as celebrated for his turbulent and ungovernable spirit, (which kings and popes alike failed in subduing,) as for his inimitable skill in his art. Alternately the spoiled child of princes, and the victim of his own headstrong 94 OLYMPIA MORATA. pride and obstinacy, as well as of base profes- sional jealousy, his time was pretty equally divided between courts and prisons ; his usual conduct in which last, partook more, (as from his peculiar temper might be imagined,) of frenzy, than of resignation. But if such was his behaviour in cases where the incarceration was only the just consequence of his own passions, which (according to the too prevalent Italian fashion of that and subse- quent times,) he was little scrupulous of in- dulging even to homicide the extreme contrast of feeling and deportment produced in him, on an occasion when, to the original injustice and iniquity of the charge, was added every aggra- vation of the rigour of his confinement which malice could suggest or cruelty execute be- comes a curious subject of speculation. It assumes an interest directly connected with our subject, when we find him ascribing it, in the plainest and most direct terms, to the undis- turbed perusal of a bible in his own language,* * Although an Italian version of the Scriptures, by Mal- ermi, was printed at Venice so early as 1471, and is said to have gone through nine editions in the fifteenth, and twelve in the sixteenth century ; it is likely that the ' Bible,' which HER TIMES. 95 which was the sole companion of his solitude ; and from the diligent study of which, he seems to have imbibed a patience, calmness, and even heavenly transport which perfectly astonished himself, as well as his enemies. But (what is yet more to our purpose) he derived from it such insensibly purified and amended notions of religion, as never once (all catholic as he still, in idea, remained) to address himself, in any of his numerous recorded prayers, to saint or intermediate intercessor, but directly to the Almighty Disposer of events, through his blessed Son Jesus Christ ; while, in seasons -either of ex- treme danger and despondence, or of approach- ing deliverance, instead of the unmeaning lita- nies and invocations of the day, it was in well- afforded such exquisite delight to Cellini, was that of his countryman Brucioli, of Florence, which, published in 1530, and the subsequent years, would be a work of recent interest at the period of his imprisonment in 1538. That the transla- tion more than leaned to Lutheranism, may be inferred from the circumstance of the author's persecution for ' heresy,' and from his having dedicated an Exposition of Job to the Queen of Navarre, as "the refuge of oppressed Christians." M'Crie's History of the Reformation. 96 OLYMPIA MORATA. selected psalms that his devotional feelings found their appropriate vent. So delightful, so enviable, was the state of mind, which this reckless bon vivant and bravo represents himself as experiencing in a loath- some dungeon, (inhabited by bats and tarantu- las, and where his scanty portion of food was embittered by more than suspicion of a repeated intention to poison him,) solely from the com- forts of Scripture, perused during the hour and half of reflected light, which his dungeon each day enjoyed that it extorted from his persecu- tor, these memorable expressions : "Good God! this man triumphs and lives happily in all his distresses, while I am miserable in the midst of affluence, and suffer death on his account!"* * The autobiography of another tenant of an Italian dun- geon the recently published " Mie Prigione," of Silvio Pellico, (without exception the most delightful book of mo- dern times,) affords, at the distance of three hundred years, a blessed proof of the unimpaired efficacy of the before neg- lected Word of God ! "not only for softening nine years of imprisonment, but during their almost blessed continuance, bringing into captivity," also, " every lofty thought, and casting down every vain imagination," and " moulding into the fairest specimen of love to God and man a free- thinker, and liberal of the nineteenth century." HER TIMES. 97 Indeed, even from the depths of that yet more horrible cell, to which these involuntary excla- mations of his ruthless enemy were but the passport, his victim might have said (as were, afterwards, nearly his words) to his papal per- secutor and his courtly abettors "Would that thou, and every one who hears me, were, not almost, but altogether as I am, except these bonds !" Alas ! the " almost Christianity" of Benvenuto, unripened, as we fear it was, to full evangelical fruition, afforded, already, a sufficiently appal- ing contrast with the avowed infidelity of that unworthy successor of St* Peter, of whom, (without ceasing to style him God's vicegerent on earth,) his still partially-blinded prisoner coolly says, that he " believed neither in God nor in any article of religion !" The vices and enormities of the popes of that day were surely sufficient, humanly speak- ing, to have brought about the Reformation,! They are curiously stated, however, as the most powerful of arguments for the truth of a religion which could survive amid such iniquities, in a dialogue from Boccacio, which Olympia Mo- rata has employed her pen in translating into 98 OLYMPIA MORATA. Latin ; and which, though we have not judged it necessary to give an English version, merits attention, both as a striking proof of the free- dom indulged in speaking of papal corruptions by Romish writers, even of Boccacio's day, and, still more so, as having contributed, by its unsparing recital of them, to confirm Olympia in her abjuration of Catholicism. The narrative represents a rich merchant, of the Jewish persuasion, as resisting all the efforts of a Christian associate in trade to convert him to his own faith, until he should have visited Rome, the fountain-head and emporium, doubt- less, of genuine Christianity. The endeavours of his friend well aware of the profligacy and secularity of that court to dissuade him from a journey so little likely to terminate in his conversion, are given with great liveliness and acuteness. But the severity of the satire be- comes excessive, when the author (a staunch catholic, be it remembered, all the time) dilates on the actual enormity of the vices witnessed in the modern Babylon by the astonished Jew. The conclusion at which, however, that acute and enlightened person arrives, is one which would do honour to Christian candour and phi- HER TIMES. 99 losophy. Convinced that a religion capable of flourishing in the face of such scandalous defec- tion in its ostensible heads must be genuine, and superior to his own, the magnanimous Jew em- braces Catholicism, on his return from Rome ! What would one of such temper and talent, or rather, the acute writer by whom they were thus liberally ascribed to him, have thought of that pure Christianity, before which both Ju- daism and Catholicism must one day melt like vapours in the sunshine ? But return we to it, and to its celebrated pro- fessor, Ochino, whose soon undisguised sentiments exposed him to a long series of persecutions, in the course of which he took refuge, as has been said, at the court of Ferrara, and also resided some years with his still more distinguished friend, Peter Martyr, in England. Here his talents as a preacher found undisturbed, and, it is to be hoped, successful exercise ; and such was the estimation in which he was held by his former protestant associates there, that, having been driven thence by the virulence of spiritual tyranny during the reign of Mary, her successor Elizabeth had serious thoughts of inviting him back, as the likeliest as well as fittest person to H2 100 OLYMPIA MORATA. compose the differences, and settle the forms of English protestantism. By the frustration of this plan, England was, perhaps, providentially delivered from all pos- sibility of taint from the Anti-Trinitarian opi- nions which, at a later period of life, this great and good man is accused of having unhappily imbibed. But he was for some years, in an humbler sphere, an instrument of distinguished usefulness to a little proscribed and exiled church ; which, at the risk of another digres- sion, must be briefly (and with renewed obliga- tions to Dr. M'Crie) introduced to the female reader; were it only for the sake of the romantic escape from persecution and death, of one of her own sex, on the banks of that lovely Italian lake, which this addition to its " dolce me- morie" will invest, it is hoped, with new in- terest. There are few travellers who pass into Italy by the route of the Simplon, at least without lingering, in delighted admiration, on the banks of Lago Maggiore. But it is in quest of na- tural or, perhaps, in the case of the far-famed Borromean islands, we should rather say arti- ficial beauties, or the singular union of both, HER TIMES. 101 that the pilgrim chiefly haunts the lovely shores of Fariolo or Baveno. Or if, at Arona, the shrine of the least spurious saint of the Romish calendar, Carlo Borromeo, calls forth the tribute which benevolence and charity (under whatever garb) must elicit from every friend to humanity still it is to virtue, debased by error, and allied with much of superstition, that the palm of ad- miration is, with somewhat of alloy, awarded. But little know or dream the host of careless travellers, who, lounging or sailing away the sultry day on those lovely shores, reck little even of the striking contrast almost forced upon them, between the use and abuse of wealth by the fantastic pile, reared by a prince's folly on the mis-named /so/a Bella, on the one hand, and the gigantic monument of a nation's grati- tude for princely compassion and munificence, rising, as if in rebuke, on the opposite shore * that at the upper, and wilder, and seldom vi- sited end of the lake, lies an obscure little town, which boasted, at the era of Italy's temporary and half-forgotten Reformation, a band of as noble confessors as ever early Christian coramu- * The colossal statue to the memory of Cardinal Borromeo. 102 OLYMPIA MORATA. nity, or Alpine valley of later times, sent forth out of its pure bosom. This reformation was still in the infancy of its bright but brief career, when the flourishing church of Locarno (the more flourishing, per- haps, that it had been built, not on the " tradi- tions," or opinions, however well supported, of learned men, but chiefly on the preaching of its apostle, Beccaria, who derived his own protest- antism direct from the pure " well undefined" of Scripture,) had become an object of great and painful anxiety to the pope ; and of hostility, fo- mented by political feelings, to the popish part of the Swiss cantons, to whose confederation it was, though in a subordinate capacity, attached. No efforts of intrigue, on the one hand, or inti- midation, on the other, were spared, till the courageous Beccaria himself was driven into exile ; while another zealous teacher, an emi- nent physician, owed only to his then rare pro- fessional skill, his escape from the fangs of the already formidable inquisition. But, when art and menace were found alike inefficient to compel the protestants of Locarno to conform to the popish rites, or relinquish the light which had so clearly and mercifully dawned upon HER TIMES. 103 them, a manoeuvre "was resorted to, perhaps unparalleled in the annals of treachery, and calculated, when detected, to exasperate the very resistance it was intended to overpower. A native of the popish canton of Uri, little worthy of his descent from that birthplace of Helvetic liberty, who happened to be town-clerk of Locarno, forged a deed, purporting to be one of solemn adhesion to the catholic faith, signed by the senators, citizens, and inhabitants of the town. Some years having been allowed to elapse, and thus render more difficult the detection of this impudent forgery, it was laid as genuine before the seven cantons (with whom it was said to have been entered into) who, delighted with any colour for their bigotted interposition, immedi- ately passed a decree to enforce, in all its rigour, the supposititious and nefarious bond. Agree- ably to its tenor, all Locarnese were enjoined immediate confession and penance ; and those who declined the mass on their death-bed, were to be denied the rites of sepulture. Vain were the fervent protestations of the astonished Locarnese against the iniquitous de- cree which fell upon them like a thunderbolt. The urgently entreated mediation of the pro- 104 OLYMPIA MORATA. testant cantons, in behalf of the professors of the common faith, was artfully defeated by cruel re- ports, accusing the people of Locarno of grievous departures from the genuine tenets of the re- formers. In vain were these triumphantly put to silence by the publication of their confession of faith ; nay in vain was the fictitious bond unani- mously set aside by two successive diets. With an iniquity and partiality which has seldom been equalled, the usual manner of voting in ques- tions of religion was violated ; and undue pre- ponderance being thus given to the catholic party, it was decreed that the inhabitants of Lo- carno should either embrace the Romish religion, or leave their native country never to return, taking with them their families and property ; while, in the same partial spirit of persecution, the execution of this barbarous decree was en- trusted to the representatives of the seven ca- tholic cantons, provided the four protestant ones refused to share its iniquity. One of the latter only, that of Zurich, recorded on the spot its noble protest against a measure, which the com- parative weakness of the protestant body alone, it is to be hoped, deterred it from preventing, or at least avenging. HER TIMES. 105 Never, perhaps, since the promulgation of Christianity, did the opposite spirit of its spu- rious and genuine forms, assume a more decided contrast, or one more to the advantage of the latter, than in the conduct of the fanatical popish deputies, and that of the mild but determined confessors of Locarno. Well might our Lord's benign admonition " Pray that your flight be not in the winter," have been adopted by this persecuted portion of his followers! for their popish tyrants, in the fury of their rage, sent their agents across the Alps, to enforce, at that rigorous season, the banishment of the unfortu- nate Locarnese. It was a memorable day, and well worthy to be recorded in the annals of consistent piety, on which (after the morning had witnessed the re- cantation of a large portion of the more timid or more worldly of the inhabitants) the tried ad- herents to the truth, consisting of two hundred heads of families, were seen walking in a regular order, the men abreast, followed by their wives car- rying the infants, and leading their little children by the hand, boldly, though meekly, to confront their enemies, in full council ; by whom they were received, instead of the sympathies common 106 OLYMPIA MORATA. to humanity, with indecent levity and haughty contempt.* Their calm and solemn appeals to Scripture, as the foundation of their purified doctrine, and, in the name of their common Saviour, to the compassion of the audience towards helpless women and children, proved alike ineffectual, with judges, whom the historian of the Reforma- tion (from whom this account is abridged) trirly says, " were rigid and haughty as the Alps, to whose impenetrable snows they sternly consigned these unoffending pilgrims. Their petitions to be spared a winter's journey was rudely disregarded by men ; and it was only by the still sharper trial of persecution that its immediate hardships were for a short time (perhaps in mercy) de- layed. * " The answer of these dauntless men to the arrogant question, whether they were prepared, at the bidding of their foreign tyrants, to renounce their faith, is too striking not to be given at large. ' We will live in it, we will die in it ; ' they with one voice replied, while the exclamations ' It is the only true faith ! it is the only saving faith ! ' continued for a considerable time to resound from different parts of the assembly, like the murmurs which succeed the principal peal in a thunder-storm." M'Crie's History. HER TIMES. A papal nuncio came to fill up at Locarno the measure of injustice and tyranny ; and though he failed in the atrocious design of confiscating the property and detaining the children of the unhappy exiles, he obtained full power to em- bitter their remaining sojourn, by attempts at conversion ; all of which, however, proved ut- terly fruitless in seducing a single renegade from their late public profession. On the contrary, being himself foiled and mortified by the dex- terity and acuteness of three admirable ladies, whose names have descended to enrich the an- nals of female protestant heroism, he carried his resentment against one of them, the heroic Bar- bara di Montalto, so far as to procure an order from the deputies to arrest her for blaspheming against the Mass. Her escape combines with all the interest of romance, the far higher and more sacred charac- ter of one of those Divine interpositions by which the lives of the early disciples of Christ were sometimes miraculously preserved. Her hus- band's house on the lake constructed as a place of defence in the wars of the Guelfs and Ghibellines had a concealed door, which it required the strength of six men to move, open- 108 OLYMPIA MORATA. ing on the water, where a boat was always kept, to carry off the inmates on any sudden alarm. This door (under the influence of an alarming dream, relating not to his wife but himself,) her husband caused his servants to open before night; and early the next morning, while the lady was dressing, the officers of justice burst into the room, with the warrant for her apprehension. With the presence of mind which belongs both to true courage and true piety, she begged to be allowed to retire to complete her dress; and availing herself of the secret door, leaped into the boat, and was rowed off in safety before the eyes of her exasperated enemies. The confisca- tion of her husband's property was the first gra- tification of their malice ; but it found full vent in the torture and subsequent execution of a poor tradesman of the reformed faith, for ex- pressions derogatory to the Virgin Mary ; a fate which not even the intercession of his Catholic townsmen had influence to avert. From such a home as Locarno had now become it was almost a relief to the harassed exiles to be permitted to depart, on the 3d of March, 1555. But, not content with the natural inhospitality of the Alps, which they were, at that early sea- HER TIMES. 109 son, sent forth to encounter, their enemies took care their journey should be embittered by the denial of all the common charities of life. An edict was passed prohibiting all Milanese sub- jects from entertaining them, on pain of death ; and imposing a fine on any one who should even converse with them. The nearest and most practicable road being thus barbarously closed against them, they had no resource but to sail to the northern extremity of the lake, and endeavour to reach some place of shelter in the territory of the Grisons. At Regoreto, a small town at the foot of the Alps, snow and ice effectually barred their further progress ; and here they had to remain two months, amid all the inconveniences attending the residence of such a multitude among stran- gers. The welcome spring then opened a pas- sage for them to their protestant brethren in the Grisons, among whom about half their number took up their permanent abode ; while the re- mainder, amounting to 114 persons, went for- ward to Zurich ; the inhabitants of which (acting up to the spirit of their manly protest) came out to meet them at their approach, and consoled by 110 OLYMPIA MORATA. their kind and fraternal reception, the weary hearts of the disconsolate exiles. The ungrateful city of their nativity, it may be remarked, never recovered the forcible expulsion of its most industrious inhabitants. As if visibly to punish the cruelty of the remaining citizens, tempest laid waste their lands, and pestilence ravaged the city ; while its decline was accele- rated by the intestine divisions of the two chief families who had persecuted the protestants ; who, turning their animosities against each other, harassed the country with civil broils, and finally drew upon it the evil of a large foreign garrison. Such, or similar, it is impossible to avoid re- marking, has been the decline of every state which has sacrificed to religious bigotry the most valuable portion of its sons. The revocation of the edict of Nantes paralysed for centuries the industry of France; while the persecutions in the Low Countries reared the manufacturing prosperity of England on the temporary ruin of that of Flanders. And who shall say that the convulsions which to this day agitate both those countries, in one of which intolerance still holds perennial sway, while in the other it has been HER TIMES. Ill exchanged for still more fatal indifference are not retributive vindications of the justice of Him, to whom the blood shed in the dragonnades of the Cevennes, or in the ruthless massacres of Alva, perhaps yet " crieth " (like that of righteous Abel) " from the ground." It will be satisfactory to those whose sympa- thy has followed in any degree, the fate of the Locarnese exiles, to learn that they obtained at Zurich, from the senate, the use of a church for the celebration of worship in their own language; and enjoyed, as has been already said, the pas- toral ministrations of the once popular, but now persecuted, Ochino; a charge to which he was solemnly admitted in 1555. The Locarnese church continued to flourish, and many of the chief families of Zurich are descended from exiles, who were able amply to repay the pro- tection so generally extended to them, by the introduction of the silk manufacture, dyeing, and other arts, which soon raised the place of their refuge in wealth and celebrity above all the other cities of Switzerland.* Among the many religious privileges enjoyed by Zurich, may be reckoned that of shelter- * M'Crie's History of the Reformation in Italy. 1 12 OLYMPIA MORATA. ing the declining years and benefiting alike by the talents and virtues of another eminent Italian reformer. This was Pietro Martire Ver- migli, better known by the name of Peter Martyr, at least in England, which country (after a series of persecutions and their usual consequence, a protracted residence at Ferrara, where he was hospitably entertained by the Duchess,) he and his friend Ochino visited to- gether, on the invitation of Cranmer, during the brief halcyon reign of Edward the Sixth. At his command, while Ochino edified the me- tropolis by his preaching, Martyr delivered at Oxford a course of lectures on the Epistles of St. Paul ; probably the same as those in which, at a far earlier period, in Italy, he had tacitly refuted by able and totally opposite interpreta- tions, the catholic inferences drawn from the apostolic writings. Driven out of England on the accession of Mary, in 1554, he filled the chair of Theology and Hebrew at Zurich till his death in 1562. None of the reformers of Italy, or indeed of Europe, lived and died with a more unblemished reputation than Peter Martyr; for while atro- cious calumnies have been forged by their ene- HER TIMES. 113 mies, of almost all the other eminent men of protestant opinions, nothing unfavourable was ever whispered to his prejudice. Though dis- tinguished throughout life for manly resolution and firmness in defending the truth, his latter days were peacefully spent in the enjoyment of the friendship of his excellent colleague at Zu- rich. " Bullinger, who loved him as a brother, closed his eyes ; Conrad Gesner spread the cloth over his face, while the pastor and elders of the Locarnese church wept around his bed."* We have dwelt, perhaps, the more fondly on his character, from the frequent occurrence of his name in Burnet's history, as associated with whatever was " richest or most rare" among the promoters of our own happy Refor- mation. Hooper, whom he loved and esteemed, and " wished there were more bishops who resembled," was his intimate friend ; and Jewel, with whom he seems to have kept up a constant correspondence, informed him of, and consulted him on every important feature of the unsettled and disastrous religious a Hairs of England ; * M'Crie's History of the Reformation in Italy. I 114 OLYMPIA MORATA. which, on the accession of Elizabeth, he was repeatedly on the eve of being called over to compose. Burnet procured many interesting letters from Martyr to Bullinger on the affairs of Eng- land, by favour of the magistrates of Zurich ; probably from the same collection of MS. amid which, in the library of that place, the writer of these pages gazed with almost reverential in- terest and curiosity on two letters to the same eminent reformer, from the unfortunate Lady Jane Grey. The beautifully formed and fault- less hand-writing of these last (if such indica- tions are indeed worthy of any consideration) is eminently characteristic of that serenity and equanimity of mind which never deserted her, either on her pageant throne, or amid the sterner realities of the scaffold which succeeded. It may afford a pleasing proof of the united power of religion and affliction to expel the most fondly cherished weaknesses of the human heart to learn that, Aylmer, her preceptor, complained of this illustrious and gifted pupil, that he could not prevail on her to throw off (in imitation of her still more illustrious cousin, the princess Elizabeth) the vanities of dress, and to HER TIMES. 115 abstain from wearing gold and gems, and plait- ing the hair ; and that he entreated Bullinger in a letter to exhort her on the subject.* One cannot help contrasting with this prema- ture sobriety in Elizabeth, the subsequent love, not of magnificence only, but even coquetry in dress, which, amid the mightiest affairs of state, and to an advanced period of life, the " maiden queen" retained. And it forms a curious subject of comparison between that " Jane of Suffolk" and the " Olympia Morata," with whom her * One loves to hope that it was rather fond remembrance of the virtues of his gifted pupils, than hopes of preferment, which induced Aylmer (then an exile in Switzerland, but afterwards made by Elizabeth Bishop of London,) to pen his indignant reply to Knox's " Blast against the monstrous re- giment of women," from which, as few female readers have probably met with the ungallant diatribe, we cannot resist extracting the uncourteous opening lines. " To promote a woman to bear rule, superiority, or dominion over any realm, nation, or city, is repugnant to nature, contumely to God, and finally, the subversion of good order, and of all equity and justice." The reasons assigned are yet more humiliating. " For their sight in civil government is but blindness, their strength weakness, their counsel foolishness, and their judg- ment frenzy ! !" Alas, for Mary of Scotland ! since such was her stern censor's opinion of female sovereigns ere she had yet assumed her thorny sceptre ! 116 OLYMPIA MORATA. name is by several authors' (as twin wonders of female erudition and excellence) coupled that in youth both should have had a decided taste for vanities, which, beneath the weaning hand of early affliction, both so unhesitatingly re- signed. But the name of Olympia recals us (by a magic as yet unknown to the reader) within that hallowed circle of her own peculiar friend- ships and history, to which the second, and, it is hoped, far more interesting portion of this little work will be specially devoted ; and (as a meet introduction to which) we have reserved for the close of our preparatory sketch, the eventful and almost romantic career of the dearest and most influential of all the friends of her youth, the learned, amiable, and accom- plished Celio Secundo Curio. The life of Curio, like that of his charming friend and correspondent, was early chequered with vicissitudes ; though unlike hers, prolonged to an advanced period, and permitted tranquilly to close, amid the peaceful discharge of the most congenial duties, fourteen years after that of the pupil, whose father he had first led to the full knowledge of the truth. His own early HER TIMES. 117 acquaintance with the pure faith of the Gospel may be traced, as directly as that of most of the Italian reformers, to the diligent perusal of Scripture ; which a beautifully written copy of the Bible, bequeathed to him by his father, proved the means of inducing him to study with uncommon attention. Left an orphan (the youngest of twenty-three children) at the early age of nine years, but allied to some of the best families of Piedmont, he received a liberal education at the university of Turin. Having met, at the age of twenty, with the writings of the German reformers, they inspired him with a strong desire to visit that country ; for which he set out, accompanied by twoother natives of -Italy, afterwards, like himself, eminent protestant ministers. Some youthful want of caution on religious subjects exposed the friends to imprisonment by the Cardinal Bishop of Ivrea ; from which Curio was not only released, on the intercession of his rela- tives, but the bishop, pleased with his talents, placed him, for the purpose of assisting his studies, in the priory of San Benigno. This was not a field in which a zealous young convert was likely to remain long inactive > 118 OLYMPIA MORATA. and his first attacks on superstition were directed against that of the monks, and were carried to a length, which, but for the interposition of Providence, might, even in less bigotted times, have proved fatal to the young reformer. He had the daring to abstract from their repository, on the altar of the convent-chapel, the relics usually worshipped there, and to substitute a copy of the Bible with the following inscription annexed to it, " This is the Ark of Covenant which contains the genuine Oracles of God, and true relics of the Saints." The fervour which could dictate so hazardous a proceeding, was reserved for further useful- ness ; and Curio, on whom suspicion had na- turally fallen, succeeded in escaping to Milan. During his stay in the Milanese he married a lady of the illustrious family of the Isaaci, and gained great reputation by teaching polite let- ters, the then sure road to distinction through- out Italy. Driven from home by the invasion of the Spaniards, he first resided under the pro- tection of the Count de Monferrat ; and was then induced to revisit his native country, where a married sister and her husband, who had possessed themselves of his patrimony, were HER TIMES. 119 unnatural enough to prefer against him a charge of heresy. Retiring to an obscure village of Savoy, his warmth of disposition, and inherent love of truth, again induced him to come forward as its cham- pion. A Dominican monk, whom he had gone to hear preach, having bitterly calumniated the German reformers, and corroborated his calum- nies by falsified quotations, Curio, after sermon, producing the book, which he happened to have with him, confuted the friar, to his utter dis- comfiture and the indignation of the audience, who drove the propagator of the falsehoods with ignominy from the place. Curio, as might have been supposed, was forthwith informed against and apprehended by the inquisition, who, it may be believed, did not let slip so good an opportunity of adding to his present transgression, the former enor- mity relating to the relics. To counteract the powerful influence of his connexions, the admi- nistrator of the bishoprick of Turin went himself to Rome to procure his condemnation ; and the prisoner was left in the custody of a brother of Cardinal Cibo, who, to obviate all attempt at escape, put him (like a yet more illustrious 120 OLYMPIA MORATA. apostle of the truth) "in an inner prison, and made his feet fast in the stocks." In this apparently hopeless situation his re- solution and presence of mind did not desert him. Having resided in his youth in the very vicinity of the prison, he was aware of the pos- sibilities of escape, could he once release his limbs. This he effected by the ingenious ex- pedient related at length by Dr. M'Crie, of first procuring the permission to remove one of his legs, which had become swelled, and then making out of some rags, a fictitious limb ; which, having contrived to substitute for the other, both were thus set at liberty ; and his knowledge of the localities enabling him to scale the walls suc- cessfully even in the dark, he once more made his escape into Italy. After another sojourn in the Milanese, at Pavia, where (says the biographer of Olympia) " he taught with the greatest approbation for the space of three years," the utmost virulence of papal persecution was again let loose against him. It is equally honourable to himself and to his scholars, many of whom came from a great distance to attend his lectures, that three years they enabled him to elude the vigilance HER TIMES. 121 of the inquisition by forming a guard to accom- pany him to and from his house every day. At length the papal threat of excommunicating, on his account, the senate of the city, obliged him to fly to Venice ; whence he took shelter at Ferrara, the common refuge (as we have so often seen) of all exiles for the truth. " He went thither," (says the biographer of Olympia,) " that he might take counsel with the Princess Renee, who can never be suffici- ently extolled, and by whose benevolence he was favoured and protected, both on account of his learning and his pure religion." Here, as we have already noticed, he became the guest of Fulvio Morata, whose hospitality he richly repaid by the blessings of spiritual illu- mination ; and here was laid, in the earliest youth of his accomplished daughter, the founda- tion of that tender friendship, by which, at a later period, the loss of a parent was to be, in some measure, compensated. But the comforts of peace and a settled home, were not yet to be enjoyed by one, whose labours in the cause of truth, though already eminently blessed to the conversion of 122 OLYMPIA MORATA. many, were still further to be exercised in a field of varied usefulness. The Duchess, on the discountenance shown by her husband to all suspected Lutherans, was obliged to forward her proteye with high recom- mendations, to Lucca ; trusting, that in the comparative obscurity and distance from Rome, of that small city, he might pursue, unmolested, his vocation as a professor in the university. But scarcely had he been there one short year, when fresh orders were sent from Rome for his ap- prehension and transmission thither ; which the hospitable senate of Lucca refused to execute, but advised him to consult his safety by flight. Switzerland, whither he proceeded with new recommendations from the Duchess of Ferrara, was his ultimate refuge, but on returning some time afterwards, (when the heat of persecution had, he thought, a little subsided,) to remove his family from the neighbourhood of Lucca, he met with another of those remarkable escapes by which his eventful career was so often provi- dentially lengthened. While sitting at dinner in an inn, the room was suddenly entered by a captain of papal fa- HER TIMES. 123 miliars, or* Sbirri,' who commanded him, in the pope's name, to yield himself a prisoner. Curio rose, retaining (but with no thought of resist- ance,) the large knife with which he had just been carving ; an involuntary gesture, which so intimidated the functionary, (of a class proverbial to this day for the extreme of cowardice,) that Curio, taking advantage of his consternation, walked out of the room deliberately, threw himself on his horse, and escaped.* Honours and repose now awaited the declining years of one, who might almost have applied to himself the language of an apostle : " In jour- neyings oft, in perils in the city, and in perils by the way, and in perils among false brethren ;" and from whom, though successively the boast and ornament of nearly every university of Italy, public veneration was there powerless to avert the consequences of unflinching adherence to the Gospel. * It affords singular corroboration to the above, that an acquaintance of the writer's owed to a precisely similar cir- cumstance, the abandonment against him of a charge of in- cendiarism ; which, however absurd and preposterous, would have led, in France, (where the thing happened,) to vexatious delay and detention. 124 OLYMPIA MORATA. Immediately on his arrival in Switzerland, the senate of Berne placed him at the head of the college of Lausanne, whence he was translated, in 1547, to the chair of Roman eloquence in the university of Basle. On this occasion the de- gree of Doctor of Laws was conferred on him sitting, a mark of respect hitherto confined to Bucer alone. But greater honour was done him by the numbers who came from all parts of Europe to attend his lectures ; the anxiety of various sovereigns to attract him to their respec- tive courts. " He was invited, by the emperor Maximilian, to the university of Vienna by the Vaivode of Transylvania, to Weissembourg, and by the Duke of Savoy, to Turin ; while the pope employed the Bishop of Terracina to pre- vail on him to return to Italy, by the promise of an ample salary and provision for his daughters ; on no other condition than that of abstaining from inculcating his religious opinions." * But all these splendid offers, the last of which especially, his love of country must have ren- dered the most tempting of any, he steadily re- sisted ; and remained at Basle till his death, in * M'Crie's History of the Reformation in Italy. Mil; TIM. is. 125 1569. Few testimonies to the invaluable merits of Curio as a preacher of the truth, could be quoted, more decisive than the circumstance just mentioned ; viz. the price at which his mortal enemy the pope, was willing to purchase the silence of so formidable an adversary. The eulogies lavished on his character and writings by friends to the cause, and echoed by the whole contemporary literature of the period, would fill a volume. "Of all the refugees," says Dr. M'Crie, " the loss of none has been more re- gretted by Italian writers than that of Curio. His children, females as well as males, were dis- tinguished for their talents and learning, and among his descendants are some of the most eminent names in the protestant church." Such was the man who esteemed it (as we find from his own subsequent correspondence with her whom he styles " the glory and orna- ment of her sex,") one of his chief consolations in exile to be remembered and cherished with hereditary friendship and veneration by Olympia Morata ; who entreated (in no tone of hollow compliment, but with the genuine paternal in- terest with which he had regarded her from the 126 OLYMP1A MORATA. cradle,) to be a participator in the enjoyment of any new work that might issue from her pen ; and to whom, on her early death-bed, she be- queathed the collection and arrangement of the few the, alas ! very few specimens of the once so highly esteemed writings, which the ravages of civil war had permitted to escape from the flames. To the mixture of affection and reverence with which the editorial office was performed, the original collection of her recovered works (dedicated, with singular propriety, to the pro- testant Queen Elizabeth of England) bears suf- ficient witness. And it is felt to be no very presumptuous hope, that the fragments of ex- alted piety and classical eloquence, judged worthy of being presented to the admiration of contemporaries by one himself so gifted with both as Curio, may command (especially when embalmed in the venerable antiquity of nearly three centuries) not only the curiosity, but in- terest, of the countrywomen of her to whom they were originally, as no unworthy or unac- ceptable offering, inscribed. We have now sketched, with somewhat of the HER TIMES. 127 rambling discursive freedom attributed by pro- fessional artists to the unregulated efforts of humbler amateurs, the chief features, historical, moral, and religious, of the court and age of one, whom (had we allowed ourselves to em- bark on the gentle, though, alas ! oft ruffled current of her own fascinating biography) we felt that to quit would be impossible, even to chronicle monarchs, or commemorate saints. And it is hoped, that the transition from the lofty region of court splendour, classical erudi- tion, and even Christian heroism amid the early reformers, to all the gentler sympathies and charities of private life, will but the more re- freshingly introduce the feminine virtues of her whom splendour could not bribe, nor persecu- tion intimidate, nor literature seduce, from the path of domestic duties, warm affections, and Christian usefulness. Enough has been done (or, at least, at- tempted) though amid much of acknowledged obligation to abler pens, and much of conscious imperfection in arrangement to prove the splendour, external and intellectual, of Fer- rara, the learning and eminence of its literati, 128 OLYMPIA MORATA. the devotion and magnanimity of its confessors. To have lived in such times was, indeed, a pri- vilege to read of them may, perhaps, with the blessing of God, toe in some measure to revive them ! OLYMPIA MORATA. PART II. HER LIFE. IT was in the precincts of a court, thus at once brilliant and virtuous at an era, alike famous for polite literature and deep learning and amid the dawning splendour of that day-spring from on high, which poured, for a few bright halcyon years, its unchecked radiance over what a contemporary historian has (notwithstanding its boasted illumination) emphatically called " the darkness of Italy," that Olympia Fulvia Morata was born in the year 1526, of parents well qualified to transmit to their offspring an inheritance of talent and worth. Her mother, Lucretia, was a model of matronly and domestic virtue, and testified, by her admirable subse- K 130 OLYMPIA MORATA. quent conduct in times of trial and persecution, that, in strength of mind and principle, she resembled her accomplished daughter. Her father, as has been already mentioned, was a parent admirably fitted to form the mind, and foster the genius, of so promising a pupil : nor was he unassisted in the grateful task by associates of equal eminence. Even in her sixth year, she had attracted the notice, and enjoyed the tuition, of Cselio Calcagnini, a learned canon of the cathedral, her father's intimate friend, who had stood sponsor for her at her baptism, and who, being absent, desires Fulvio, in one of his letters, to " imprint a kiss, in his name, on the brow of the little maiden, already endeared to him by her sprightly prat- tle." Indeed, so early did this discerning in- structor detect the superiority of her talents and genius for literature, that he advised her father to devote her attentin exclusively to the studies she had so auspiciously begun, and to substi- tute, in her hands, the pen for the needle, and books for the ordinary employments allotted to her sex.* * What the precise nature of those employments then was, we gather from another letter on education, (addressed to her HER LIFE. 131 The advice coincided too strongly with pa- rental partiality, and the pursuits most conge- nial to her father's disposition, not to be adopted to its fullest extent ; and the result was, that at the early age of twelve, Olympia was already (to use the exact words of her biographer) "tho- roughly instructed, not only in the Greek and Latin languages, but also in rhetoric and other learned sciences." It is pleasing to be able to assert, on unques- tionable contemporary authority, that this pre- cocity of genius was set off, in her case, by its beautiful and invariable attendants through life sweetness of disposition, and the most en- gaging modesty. Indeed, it is impossible for those familiarly acquainted with her character to think of her splendid intellectual acquire- ments with any other feeling than that with which cultivated minds regard those external father by his celebrated friend, Cffilio Secondo Curio,) in which he says " The duties of girls are to spin/ to sew, to knit, and to be able to exercise the culinary art; for Solomon, in his praise of a holy woman, says, ' She seeketh wool and flax, and worketh with her hands.' But," adds the courteous writer, " we do not exclude females from letters and know- ledge, for there are many who are more able to pursue those studies than the other sex." K 2 132 OLYMPIA MORATA. trappings of greatness, which, while they ap- propriately adorn and distinguish exalted rank, can add nothing to intrinsic nobility of cha- racter. And to pursue the parallel a little farther as true nobility walks unfettered, and almost unconscious, under a weight of magnifi- cence by which vulgar minds are either over- whelmed or elated, the cumbrous robe of learn- ing floated as easily and gracefully round the youthful form of Olympia Morata, as if, in reality, that " tenth Muse," whom, in after-life, (according to the somewhat trite style of com- pliment then in use,) she was perpetually styled it had been her native element. The talents thus prematurely developed were destined to expand in a still more genial and elevated atmosphere, by the event which trans- ported her, in her thirteenth year, from the bosom of her own family, to become a sojourner in a palace, and the companion of its princely inmates. It is thus noticed by her friend Curio, in a letter to a learned contemporary, who had applied to him for information re- specting her. "Anna d'Este, being instructed in Greek by that eminent man, John Sinapius, in order that she might have some one to excite HER LIFE. 133 in her honourable emulation, it was thought pro- per by her mother, (a princess who well deserved her exalted reputation for worth and honour,) that Olympia should be called to court, in which she resided many years with the highest credit." It is to Chilian Sinapius, however, a brother of the above, and joint preceptor to the Princess, that Olympia, in subsequently dedicating to him an elaborate Greek panegyric en Mutius Scevola, acknowledges her obligation for the great care with which he had instructed her in that lan- guage. Her biographer also enumerates among those whose instructions she shared with her royal playmate, the heroic martyr Aonio Pale- ario ; so that the admirable talents of both the youthful fellow-students seem to have lacked no advantage which a variety of preceptors, in that then favorite branch of learning, could confer. But though the child-like simplicity, amid similar pursuits, of our own Lady Jane Grey, and the graceful simplicity of Olympia herself, seem to render the acquisition of Greek, even as a learned language, by no means synonymous with pedantry, yet it may not be amiss to re- mark, that in the beginning of the sixteenth cen- tury, it was regarded rather in the light of a 134 OLYMPIA MORATA. fashionable and elegant accomplishment, than of an abstruse and recondite study.* We might almost as well accuse of pedantry those of our countrywomen who availed themselves, for en- creasing their acquaintance with French litera- ture, of the numerous refugees of that nation whom its revolution forced to take shelter on the shores of Britain as those fair daughters of Italy, whom hosts of talented exiles from Byzan- tium inoculated with the knowledge and love of what had been to them the language of a refined and highly civilized court. And let us only consider with what encreased avidity the language of France would have been * Among the circumstances favourable to the promotion of letters, enumerated by the biographer of Lorenzo di Medici, he particularly notices " the partiality shown to the study of languages, and the proficiency made in them by women, illus- trious by their birth, or eminent for their personal accom- plishments ;" such as the beautiful Alessandra Scala, or yet yet more highly endowed Cassandra Fidelis. Of the former of these distinguished females (the Olympia Morata of the court of Lorenzo) a recent Italian writer (Manzoni " Monaca di Monza") remarks, with regret, that " no relic remains, not even her portrait ;" a circumstance calculated to enhance our gratitude to those whose friendship has preserved from oblivion the mental lineaments of a character more valuable far. HER LIFE. 135 cultivated among us, had the fugitives from that country brought with them not merely the pre- cious existing materials of a for-ever-annihilated literature, but, like the banished Greeks, the ac- cumulated treasures of a period of remote and far higher civilization. How delightedly, under such circumstances, would the fair students, who now coldly scan Racine, have (like Olympia Morata) enjoyed and analysed Homer, and made perhaps, as she did, the lyre of Greece once more vocal with their juvenile effusions. It is impossible not to figure to oneself the interesting spectacle which, at the revival of letters, must have been afforded by the picturesque attire and sonorous dialect of the long robed, and long bearded, Grecian refugees ; who peopled with a thousand classical recollections the princely halls of the Este and the Medici ;* taught their children to * It was at Florence that the Greek language was first in- culcated by native Greeks, (at the head of whom was the eminent Johannes Argyropulus and Demetrius Chalcondyles) whose services were procured by the diligence of Lorenzo di Medici, and repaid by his bounty. Hence succeeding scho- lars have been profuse in their acknowledgments to their great patron, who first formed that establishment, whence (to use their own classical figure), as from the Trojan horse, so 136 OLYMPIA MORATA. " lisp in numbers," and made Europe re-echo once more with the well-nigh-forgotten name of Athens. It was in times rather later, certainly, but par- taking still, in a great measure, of the spirit which characterized their immediate precursors, that Olympia Morata, with her royal fellow- pupil, imbibed from two worthy successors of the exiled Byzantines, the elements of the Greek language ; of which, at a subsequent period of her short life, she was qualified herself to be a public instructress. Nor let us view this female professor of Greek (in an age when mathematics and Hebrew were deemed no unsuitable branches of female education) in any other or less interest- ing light, than we are accustomed to "do those many illustrious champions have sprang ; and by means of whom the knowledge of Greek was extended, not only through- out all Italy, but through France, Spain, Germany, and England. William Grocin, professor of Greek literature in the University of Oxford, resided two years at Florence, to attend the instructions of Chalcondyles ; and the great Eng- lish scholar, Thomas Linacer, was so eminently distinguished, during his abode there, by the elegance of his manners, and singular modesty, as to be selected by Lorenzo as the associate of his children in their studies. Roscoe's Lorenzo di Me- dici. HER LIFE. 137 heroines of the French Revolution, who turned to account, in a foreign land, the talents ac- quired in a higher and widely differing sphere. This being premised, we may venture, with more of sympathy than a display of female eru- dition (unassociated with everything that could adorn or refine the female character) would be apt to inspire, to follow the biographer of Olym- pia, in his enthusiastic enumeration of her won- derful proficiency in literature and learning. " Under the tuition of such men," says he, " our Olympia profited so much, as to excite the admiration of all, for learning so infinitely be- yond her tender age. Before she had completed her sixteenth year, she had composed a defence of Cicero against some of his calumniators * ; in * " We should have been at a loss to imagine the neces- sity for such a defence, or the existence of such calumniators, had we not been told that Argyropulus, the eminent Greek to whom the great Lorenzo di Medici, Politian, and others of their day, owed the knowledge of that language professed open hostility to the reputation of Cicero, whom he repre- sented as a sciolist in the Greek tongue, and as unacquainted with the different sects of philosophy, to which so many of his writings relate. The influence of his authority degraded, in the estimation of his pupils, the character of the Roman orator ; and Politian, in his riper years, shuddered at the 138 OLYMPIA MORATA. which, (according to the opinion of Calcagnini, who had first advised her to study assiduously those works of Cicero, of which, from an hum- ble admirer she became the most successful commentator,) she has wonderfully emulated the beauty and elegance of the original. At the same age she wrote the most polished Greek and Latin letters (of which many have unfortunately been lost) ; she translated much from the Italian into Latin, which the malignity of time and fate has destroyed. " It is said, that Olympia was scarcely em- ployed two years in these pursuits ; for, not content with the praise arising from these pleas- ing occupations, she aspired to attain the pin- nacle of glory and honour, and began to study the higher branches of philosophy and theology, in which, as in other literary studies, she soon excelled in a high degree ; penetrating into the most difficult questions, with great quickness of mind, and converting them to public and private benefit. " That a young girl should be able to accom- recollection of the time when the ignorance of Tully was a matter taken for granted by him and his fellow students." Roscoe's Life of Lorenzo di Medici. HER LIFE. 139 plish this was astonishing, and almost miracu- lous, especially since her preceptor, Chilian, styles her, in many of these branches of science, self-taught. Nor did she ever relax in her studies and diligence, but proceeded even beyond what could have been imagined. Having collected a rich treasure of the sciences, she never hesitated to draw from it, and to distribute to others. " The year in which she began to put on the professional habit, we learn, from the epistle of Curio to Xystus Betuleius, was, that before the death of her father, when she had just completed her sixteenth year. This is more distinctly stated in the preface to the first edition of the works of Olympia, which Curio dedicated to that illustrious lady, Isabella Manricha, of Bre- segna, where he circumstantially relates the particulars of her entrance into the academy of Ferrara ; and as this account of Curio is of much importance in her history, I subjoin his precise words. ' She wrote observations on Homer, the prince of poets, whom she translated with great strength and sweetness. She composed many and various poems with great elegance, especially on divine subjects, and dialogues in Greek and Latin, in imitation of Plato and Cicero, in such 140 OLYMPIA MORATA. perfection that even Zoilus himself could have found nothing to criticise. And she wrote those three essays on the paradoxes of Marcus Tullius Cicero, which in Greek are called prefaces, when she was scarcely sixteen years old ; and declaim- ed, from memory, and with excellent pronuncia tion, her explanation of the paradoxes in the private academy of the Duchess of Ferrara.' " Colomesius is therefore in error in stating in his Bibliotheca Delecta, that Olympia was twenty-nine years of age when she taught pub- licly in Greek, in the University of Heidelberg. For, in the first place, it is evident, from the words of Curio just quoted, that she, as a girl, and while yet in Italy, lectured before Renee ; and it is also certain that she had scarcely at- tained her twenty-ninth year, when the fatal sisters cut the thread of her life. Teissius, Tho- masinus, and others, fall into similar error, when they assert, with Colomesius, that Olympia taught publicly in Germany." * We have given the above long, and (like the greater part of the Latin biography, on which our simple narrative is founded) pedantic quota- tion, at full length ; both from pardonable pride * Nolteni Vita Olympiae Moratae. HER LIFE. 141 in showing to how many learned men of her own day, our heroine's talents and history afforded matter for admiration or controversy ; and still rather to establish, on more than one or two partial authorities, the astonishing versatility, as well as extent of her genius. To these may be added the following, from the same letter of her friend and preceptor Curio, to the learned indi- vidual, mentioned as having questioned him about his pupil. " You write to me that you desire to be in- formed of our Olympia, because many deem the name and character fictitious. I will do what you ask willingly, and shortly, although I might refer you to George Hermann, who knows her well. Her father was Fulvio Morata, a native of Mantua, a man famous for learning and probity, with whom I was very intimate. I have heard her at court declaiming in Latin, speaking Greek, and answering questions, as well as any of the females among the ancients could have done. Do not feel a doubt respecting the Sapphic ode, written in Greek, in which she celebrates the praises of the Most High. It is indeed the work of a real Olympia, whom we have known from her infancy, and whose other productions we 142 OLYMPIA MORATA. possess. Nor does it at all astonish us. For she is skilled in Greek and Roman literature beyond what any one can credit, and she is also re- nowned for her knowledge of religion." And how delightfully, after having discharged, with due biographical fidelity, the pleasing task of recording the extraordinary classical acquire- ments of this gifted creature, does the concluding eulogium of her beloved " Father in Christ" introduce us to those higher features of her mind and character, on which we thus find him dwell- ing, with truly paternal warmth of exultation, in a letter written to her soon after her marriage and settlement in Germany. " I give you eternal thanks, my Olympia, the glory and ornament of your sex, that although so long a time has elapsed, and there is so great a distance between us, you have not. forgotten me ; and still cherish for me an hereditary re- gard as for your own, and your father's friend. In return, I assure you, that as, while he lived, there was no individual in the world to whom I felt more attached, so you, who worthily emu- late his proficiency in all liberal studies, but espe- cially his piety, are the only female (my own wife and daughters excepted) whose friendship I value HER LIFE. 143 and cultivate. Wherefore I congratulate your excellent husband as cordially as if he had been united to one of my own children ; and return thanks to God, who, taking pity on you, rescued and restored you to liberty. " I am much pleased with the hymn or ode translated into Greek, to which you have added the forty-sixth Psalm of David. I wish you would treat more psalms in the same manner, and then we should not envy the Greeks their Pindar. Go on, my Olympia, wherever the muse shall call you, and place a divine laurel on your inspired brow ; for you have imbibed the poetical spirit from a fountain more sacred far than Pindar or Sappho. If you write any thing new, pray communicate it, that I may congratu- late you afresh, and share your enjoyment. I wish, dearest Olympia, you would write more frequently, for nothing delights me more than the eloquence, piety, and sweetness of your let- ters. And that you may know how dear your very fame is to me, I send you a copy of a letter I wrote about you, at the request of Xystus Be- tuleius, a learned man and intimate friend of mine, a short time after you left Augsburgh. " Adieu, dearest Olympia, to you and your 144 OLYMPIA MORATA. excellent husband, and may God defend and cherish you. If ever you return to Italy, I be- seech you pass this way, that we may embrace each other, and having joined our hands, as our hearts have long been united, may renew our former friendship. My wife and children salute you. Alike happy and pious one! once more, " Basle, 5th Sept." " Farewell. But we must return from this digression to that brilliant morning in the life of Olympia which was ere long, in a temporal point of view, to be so suddenly and sadly overcast. That she should, in addition to her other proofs of genius, have " lisped in numbers," is not to be wondered at, considering the poetical atmosphere which from childhood she had breathed. Probably the earliest pageant on which her young eyes gazed may have been the splendid obsequies of Ariosto ; whose death all Italy deplored as a national loss, and whose verses derived from it additional in- terest and celebrity. During her residence in the palace, the post of private secretary to the Duchess was filled by Bernardo Tasso, father to the celebrated Torquato, himself a most elegant Italian poet ; while the court physician, Angelo HER LIFE. 145 Manzolli (better known by his assumed name of Palingenius), her godfather Calcagnini, and her father himself, as well as her preceptors the two Sinapii and Paleario, were all more or less cele- brated for their excellent Lathi verses. The effect of such an atmosphere in kindling the slightest spark of latent genius, may easily be estimated by those whose fortune it has been to move in a talented and intellectual circle ; and who know how readily the young mind ex- pands under the fostering influence of example and encouragement. Who can think of this period of the existence of a young creature thus highly-gifted and enviably circumstanced, and not feel reminded of the gay and gorgeous po- megranate of her own bright sunny land, nest- ling its luxuriant blossoms beneath the friendly shelter of some lordly villa of more prosperous days, and flinging back beauty and splendour in return. Decay may be busy at the founda- tion of the princely pile ; the rude blast about to overwhelm at once, the protector and the pro- tected, may be, even now, on the wing; but the passing traveller sees only the blended image of the magnificence of art, and the perennial love- liness of nature. 146 OLYMPIA MORATA. Cheered as she was by the smiles of a court, and the object of an intoxicating adulation, which her rare modesty induced her, in after- life, to ascribe, less to her uncommon eminence in literature, than to her position as a royal fa- vourite Olympia enjoyed, in addition, what, to one of her disposition, must have appeared doubly valuable ; viz. the maternal kindness of the Duchess, and the tenderest friendship with her accomplished daughter Anne. How truly sisterly was this union, we may gather from her touching allusion to it in her celebrated letter to that princess ; when time and distance had interrupted, though they could never eradi- cate from so affectionate a heart, the early inti- macy. " For you know how familiarly (although you were my princess and mistress,) we spent so many years together; and how those studies which ought to encrease more and more our mutual good-will, were in common between us." And here we may, perhaps, with peculiar ap- propriateness introduce the account given us by the biographer of Olympia, and corroborated by all contemporary authorities of this charming princess ; the fond wishes for whom, of her early HER LIFE. 147 playmate, met their most welcome accomplish- ment in her uniform protection of the oppressed of the reformed communion, and strenuous en- deavours to mitigate, in a bigoted and ferocious court, the fury of persecution. Anne of Este was born in the year 1531, and was, consequently, five years younger than her companion, Olympia Morata. This inequality of age, while it seems to have no way affected the intimacy of their friendship, perhaps, served to justify or authorize the tone of gentle admoni- tion adopted by the elder of the two friends in the celebrated letter already quoted ; which, though written at a subsequent period, and on the verge of that early grave which its pious writer already speaks of as the wished-for haven, we shall subjoin to the present sketch. In literary pursuits the princess Anne was no unworthy rival to her talented friend. She was well versed in Latin, and her translation into that language of some Italian fables, is thus quaintly eulogized by Calcagnini, in an epistle of which, as a specimen of the solemn hyperbole of the age, we cannot resist extracting a sen- tence. The little personage, thus pompously L 2 148 OLYMPIA MORATA. addressed, must have been at the time, exactly ten years old. " Those Milesian fables which you have sent me, O princess ! blessed alike with the gifts of fortune and of genius ! exhibit so many graces, that by your means they have become free of the Roman city, and you have invested them in so fine a robe, that they deserve to appear on the patrician bench, and be received in the list of senators ! ! ! " " Nor did the Princess Anne," says the bio- grapher, of her friend, " neglect Greek, which she learned from Aonio Paleario. From such emi- nent masters, which she had, in common with Olympia, she made wonderful progress in the arts and sciences taught at Ferrara ; and all con- temporary authorities, as Thuanus,Teissius, Bran- tome and Marot, unite in extolling in the highest degree, the virtues, piety, wit, and learning of the princess."* She married, in 1548, (shortly before the very different nuptials of her humbler friend,) Francis of Lorraine, Duke of Guise; whom, notwith- * Noltenii Vita Olympian HER LIFE. 149 standing many errors, and some alleged infi- delities, she tenderly loved ; and whose assassi- nation by Poltrot, during the siege of Orleans in 1566, she long sincerely deplored. An old au- thor has preserved a touching farewell, addressed by the murdered prince on his death-bed, to his faithful partner, sufficiently indicative of the depth and sincerity of his regard for so worthy a consort. It was during the continuance of this union, that Anne was so urgently exhorted by Olympia to avail herself of her influence with her husband, and of her unbounded credit at court, to miti- gate the sufferings of the persecuted protestants of France. And the biographer of the latter assures us, that when " Catherine de Medici, who governed the kingdom during her son's mi- nority, with the assistance of the Duke of Guise, persecuted, first by snares, and then by open violence, the pious servants of the church of Christ Anne d'Este, following the footsteps of her mother, always favoured them." Thuanus relates, that when, on occasion of the massacre of St. Barthelemi, the whole female court were standing at the windows to behold the spectacle, Anne alone, the wife of Guise, 150 OLYMPIA MORATA. melted into tears ; and earnestly entreated Ca- therine that, if she wished well to the king and the kingdom, she should command them to de- sist from the murder of the innocent. She pre- served many of the intended victims, particu- larly the daughter of the Chancellor Michael de 1'Hopital, from the rage of the assassins, on which occasion, 1'Hopital returned her thanks in a celebrated poem, in which he highly extols her virtue and piety. That Anne was enlightened by the gospel, Thuanus clearly insinuates; for in his twenty-fourth book, for the year 1560, he thus writes, " Anne was brought up from her earliest days at Ferrara, under her mother Renee, and instructed in the doctrines which were there promulgated ; for which purpose she was asso- ciated with Olympia Morata, a most excellent and learned lady."* Is it not delightful, as well as encouraging to female piety, in the less elevated ranks of life, to be able to trace so decidedly, on the authority of the most eminent historians to the early com- panionship and admirable counsels of Anne d'Este's humbler friend, that course of con- * Nolten. HER LIFE. 151 sistent and (considering the times) heroic inter- position, in behalf of oppressed innocence, which has merited for the wife of the bigotted Duke of Guise, the admiration and gratitude of protest- antism ? And is it not delightful also, to be able to produce, in corroboration of so pleasing a fact, and for the admiration of all who are qualified to appreciate either the gentler or higher virtues of the female character, the fol- lowing letter, the most sweetly persuasive which, perhaps, was ever dictated by a friendship, " not of this world !" " Olympia Fulvia Morata, wishes health through Jesus Christ, to Anna d'Este, Duchess of Guise. " Most illustrious Princess Anna ! Al- though we are now so widely separated from each other, believe me, I have never forgotten you. Hitherto, diffidence has prevented my writing to you ; but an opportunity having pre- sented itself, by the visit of a learned and pious man from Lorraine, I first eagerly embraced it to enquire of him what you were doing ; and, when he promised to see a letter from roe for- warded to you, I felt persuaded that you, who 152 OLYMPIA MORATA. were educated along with me from your in- fancy, would not be so hard-hearted as to re- fuse to read it.* For you know how familiarly (although you were my princess and mistress) we spent so many years together, and how com- pletely those studies, which ought deservedly to encrease more and more our mutual good- will, were in common between us. Indeed, il- lustrious princess, I call God to witness, I wish you well from my heart, and, if I can be in any way of service to you (not that I desire to live again in a court, for that, were I so inclined, I might do heref), either in the way of conso- lation or in any other matter, be assured that I will do it willingly and earnestly. " But my most fervent wish is, that you should apply yourself seriously to the study of the sacred Scriptures, which alone can unite you to God, and console amid all the miseries of this life. / have no other consolation, no other delight. For, since (by God's goodness to me) I have escaped the idolatry of Italy, and * This, it must be remembered, alludes to the supposed disgrace of Olympia at the court of Ferrara. t In Germany, where many splendid offers were at her disposal. HER LIFE. 153 accompanied my husband to Germany, it is in- credible what a change He has been pleased to work upon my mind ; so that I, who formerly felt such an aversion to divine things, can now find pleasure in them alone. My mind, my in- clination, and my delight, are all placed in them ; and I despise riches, honours and plea- sures, which I was formerly wont to admire. Oh ! that you also, dearest princess, would take these things into your serious consideration ! There is nothing lasting here, believe me all things are subject to change ; as the poet says, ' we must one day all tread the dark paths of death,' and time passes swiftly along. Nei- ther are riches, nor honours, nor the favour of kings, of any avail ; but that faith, with which we embrace Christ, can alone rescue us from eternal death and condemnation ; which faith, as it is the ' gift of God,' you ought to seek by frequent prayer. " It is not sufficient that you know the his- tory of Christ of this Satan himself is not ignorant but you are required to have that faith which works by love, which makes you able to confess Christ among his enemies ; for he saith, ' Whoever is ashamed of me, of him 154 OLYMPIA MORATA. will I be ashamed before my Father ;' nor would there ever have been any martyrs had it been permitted us to conceal our faith. " Wherefore, my excellent princess, since God has so favoured you as make you see the truth, and since you well know that all those persons who are now consigned to the stake, are innocent, and submit to such tortures for the Gospel of Christ, duty enjoins you to ma- nifest your sentiments, either by using your influence with the king in their favour, or, if that shall fail, in praying for them. For if, without remonstrance or open displeasure, you permit them to be martyred and slain, you will appear by your silence not only to connive at, but conspire for their murder, and to league with the enemies of Christ. " Methinks I hear you say, ' If I should do this, I shall irritate the king 'or my husband against me, and raise myself a host of enemies.' Believe me, it is a light thing to be hated by men, when compared with the displeasure of that God, who not only can ' kill the body,' but can consign the soul so unquenchable fires. If you have Him, in whose hands are all things, for your friend, no one can harm you but by HER LIFE. 155 his permission. Revolve, I pray you, these things in your mind, and give me the great sa- tisfaction of knowing that you seriously cultivate piety, and live in the fear of God. " Be diligent, I beseech you, in your study of Holy Scripture and in prayer. ' Whatever,' says Christ, ' you ask from the Father in my name, He will give you.' Remember that you are born to immortality, and oh ! do not listen to those who thus argue, ' Life is very short, therefore let us gratify our desires, and enjoy the pleasures of this world !' Hear rather what the Apostle Paul says, ' If ye live according to the flesh (that is, if you give yourselves up to sensual pleasures) ye shall die,' viz. be deli- vered up unto everlasting death. " I will write further on these matters, if I may hope that my letters will be agreeable to you ; and will gladly provide you with books on Christianity, trusting that your desire is, truly to ' learn Christ.' The great love I bear to you has dictated this letter, and, when God shall call me to His celestial mansions, my warmest wish will be that you should be a par- taker of the same eternal rewards; and, should it be so, (as in Him I trust !) great will be the 156 OLYMPIA MORATA. happiness I shall derive from it, and my grati- tude for it to God. " Heidelberg, 1st June, 1554." The heroism which in the spirit of the above admirable exhortations, Anne of Este was en- abled, during the trying circumstances attending the first marriage, to display, found its earthly reward in a happy subsequent union, with James of Savoy, Duke de Nemours, general of the French armies in Italy; who, dying in 1581, she remained a widow, but surrounded with an illustrious progeny. " Leaving worldly affairs," says an old chronicler, " she passed into heaven at Paris, on the 17th of May, 1607, in the seventy-sixth year of her age." Thus fulfilling (if the quaint but touching words were realized) the ardent aspirations of her long-since glori- fied, but to the last, affectionate friend. Various funeral elegies bear testimony to her universally acknowledged virtues. A panegyrist of a different class, the enthu- siastic votary of female loveliness, Brant6me, not content with simply designating her as the most beautiful woman in Christendom, has left us curious particulars of the first meeting between HER LIFE. 157 her and another royal personage, celebrated alike for her pride and her charms, the haughty Christina of Denmark, niece to the Emperor Charles the Fifth, and widow of the Duke of Lorrame. What gave its peculiarity to the in- terview was, that the latter princess, scorning to ally herself to a cadet of the same family, to whose head she had once been united had in- dignantly rejected the hand of the Duke de Guise ; but on hearing his subsequent good for- tune in obtaining that of Anne d'Este, grand- daughter of Louis the Twelfth, she felt an ex- treme curiosity to see the rival, with whose fame for beauty and accomplishments all Europe rang. The feeling was apparently mutual, and Brantome describes with his usual naivete, the earnest and protracted gaze fixed on each other by two princesses, between whom the palm of beauty (notwithstanding the superior youth of Anne of Guise) was still almost equally divided. " But, adds the honest chronicler," Anne, satis- fied with her advantage in that respect, was con- tent to yield to her proud rival in haughtiness and vain glory. For she was the gentlest, hum- blest, and most affable princess I ever knew ; 158 OLYMPIA MORATA. and though her noble features, fine figure, and majestic deportment, might inspire a momentary awe, yet, when accosted, all was sweetness, can- dour, and condescension ; which, indeed, she took of her excellent mother, and of Louis the Twelfth, the father of his people." Such was the royal companion, with whom, for ten long happy years, Olympia lived, under one roof in the fondest intimacy ; for whom she cherished, as we have already seen, a deathless affection, and with whom she had shared, for the greater part of that period, the inestimable benefits of a truly Christian education. For it was unquestionably during these bright years, so rich in worldly consideration and enjoyments, than the seeds of a purer faith were sown by the careful hands of the Duchess Renee (with such able coadjutors as Sinapius and Morata, Ochino arid Curio,) in the tender mind of her protegee. But Olympia, in various parts of her subsequent correspondence, too forcibly paints her own oc- casional disinclination to, and disregard of vital religion, while yet the inmate of a palace, and the " observed of all observers," to permit the most thoughtless to question the expediency of that reverse of fortune, by which talents and HER LIFE. 159 affections designed for heaven, were forcibly uprooted from earth, and the fleeting smiles of a court exchanged for the everlasting sunshine of the favour of God. In a supposed dialogue between herself and another of her illustrious companions, (Lavinia della Rovere, afterwards Princess Orsini,) Olyrri- pia appeals to her early friend's recollection of her distaste for Scriptural reading and divine things, and superior fondness, not only for se- cular studies, but even for the female vanities common to her sex ; as a strong proof of the wisdom and goodness of Him, who had, by his celestial teaching, so completely turned the cur- rent of her thoughts and affections to higher and holier pursuits. . In all probability, therefore, no discipline less mercifully severe, than that which He saw fit to adopt, would have extricated this glorious crea- ture from what she in another place herself calls " being entangled in the mire of vanity and folly, in which she would have remained, had not God of his mercy drawn her out of it." And hence, perhaps, was added in her case, to the storm of general persecution which ravaged Fer- rara the more bitter trial of unkindness and OLYMPIA MORATA. alienation where she had been most courted and beloved. " Nothing," remarks her biographer, 4< is firm and stable in human affairs ; for no sooner had Olympia experienced the highest patronage and countenance of the princes and learned men of Ferrara, than suddenly she encountered the bit- terest change of fortune. A severe persecution was instituted against those who professed Lu- theranism at the Court of Ferrara in the year 1547 ; on which account it became necessary for Olympia to leave the court. Misfortune did not come single. Her father, Fulvio, was at- tacked with a fatal disease ; and that she might attend upon him, she returned to his house. Her pious father dying in 1548, she was imme- diately deserted with the grossest indignity by those from whom she had the least deserved it, even by Renee herself; and for the instructions in science and literature which she had bestowed on Anna d'Este, she received only hatred and disrespect. In these times, Popes Paul the Third and Julius the Third, sent priests into Italy, who sought out those professing Luther- anism, and tortured them, if obstinate, with the severest corporal sufferings. These spies ac- HER LIFE. 161 cused Olympia, (then publicly professing the gospel,) to Duke Hercules; by whose authority by the malevolence of the spies and the misre- presentations of other wicked persons, they so accomplished their wish, that even Renee was entirely alienated from her. She was almost declared a heretic, and hence, in her disgust at the pleasures of a court, God fired her mind with the desire of privately prosecuting those for- bidden sacred studies, of which at that time, she thus wrote : " Now no one is permitted to learn divine wisdom, or even to read the books of either Testament !"* But the storm destined ultimately to break on the head of the innocent Olympia, had descended, even some years earlier, on the crowned brow of her royal mistress. As early as 1545 a brief had been addressed by the Pope to the ecclesiastical authorities of Ferrara (which was regarded by the papal See as the great nursery or hot-bed of heresy in Italy), authorizing them to investigate, even by means of torture, into the religious sen- timents of all suspected persons, and transmit the result to Rome. This rigorous sentence, * Noltenii Vita Olympiae. M 162 OLYMPIA MORATA. aimed in a great measure at her own household and dependants, proved, of course, very dis- pleasing and distressing to Renee ; but as it failed in shaking her attachment to the reformed opinions, means were taken to enlist in the cause of bigotry and persecution her nephew, Henry the Second, King of France. He sent his own inquisitor to Ferrara, to admonish the Duchess, first with gentleness, and as the beloved aunt of his sovereign, against the detestable and con- demned opinions in which she had entangled her- self; and if that proved unavailing, to have recourse, in conjunction with the Duke her hus- band, to rigour and severity. Should remonstrance be unsuccessful, the harsh measure was to be ultimately adopted, of separating her from her children ; and not allow- ing any of her family, accused, or even suspected of heretical sentiments, to approach her. These last, indeed, were to be brought to trial, and exemplary punishment inflicted. " The daughter of Louis the Twelfth," (says Dr. M'Crie) " whose spirit was equal to her piety, spurned these conditions ; and refusing to violate her conscience, her children were taken from under her management her confidential HER LIFE. 163 servants proceeded against as heretics and she herself detained as a prisoner in the palace." It was at this stage, probably, of her unworthy treatment by a husband, whose blind devotion the Church of Rome rewarded (as has been al- ready noticed) by the alienation, in the person of his grandson, of the Duchy of Ferrara that the separation or estrangement, (which latter, between spirits so congenial, we can scarcely be- lieve it to have been) of Renee and Olympia, was finally effected ; it having been represented as taking place immediately on the death of her father in 1548, when his illness, and her subse- quent pious offices to her mother, naturally re- moved her for a while from the court. There are two particulars deserving of remark in the above melancholy, though, as we have before said, perhaps salutary reverse of fortune. First, the probable share which attendance on the death-bed of a father, himself one of the most pious and enlightened of Christians,* may providentially have had in confirming the faith * Nolten says, " Olympia herself is so profuse in her praises of the piety and doctrine of her father, who not only la- boured so hard in her education, but it appears had also guided her opinions in religion that we need scarcely any other M 2 164 OLYMPIA MORATA. of his daughter ; and inducing that very public profession of religion, in one hitherto lukewarm and indifferent, by which her dismissal from court was necessitated and justified. If so, how blessed was the exchange thus mercifully accom- plished, of an earthly for a heavenly parent, and of courtly splendour for an unfading crown ! When we find that, at a later period, even the dignified, spirited Renee herself, made conces- sions, at the suggestion of maternal affection, to see her children, who can predict to what lengths of criminal conformity a timid girl, im- perfectly grounded in the faith, might have been carried, if left in that polluted atmosphere, where Scripture was prohibited, true religion branded as heresy, and where the price of compliance might have been the continued favour and friend- ship of all whom she had been accustomed to reverence or to love. But if even, as is rendered improbable, both by Olympia's silence on the subject, and the character of the princess herself, the affections of Renee were really alienated by a firmness of testimony to his eminence." A more decisive one still will be found in a letter from himself to his ' Father in Christ,' Celio Secundo Curio, in the latter part cf the present volume. HER LIFE. 165 adherence to religion, of which her own heroic life subsequently afforded such decisive evidence, the loss was in the mean time amply compen- sated. Olympia returned to the bosom of an affectionate and pious mother ; and to the re- sumption of the most delightful domestic duties, in a sphere far more salutary, as well as conge- nial to her sex, than that of abstruse studies, and classical acquirements ; yet where these were turned to their legitimate account, and con- verted, from means of ostentatious display, into sources of tranquil and homefelt enjoyment. This short, but fruitful period of her life is thus characterized by her biographer. " As a young woman, she now lived piously in private life. After her father's death, her mo- ther's health having also declined, she, as the eldest, took upon her the management of the family, and began to educate in a suitable man- ner her brother and sisters. She instructed the latter, of whom she had three, in all the studies, literary and sacred, usually confined to the other sex ; and made one of them, Victoria, so excel- lent a scholar in Latin and polite literature, that in a short time she surpassed most of the illus- trious females of Italy. At this time her pri- 166 OLYMPIA MORATA. vate studies were exclusively directed to divine things, to which she entirely devoted herself ; oc- casionally composing Greek poems, and filling; up her leisure hours with her elegant epistles. " But, even in her retired home, she was not safe. The persecution against the disciples of Calvin and Luther still continued ; and Julius the Third moved heaven and hell that he might extirpate totally those pious men who were im- pugning his authority in divine affairs. Those he had formerly attempted to get into his power by the wiles of the fox, he now attacked with the ferocity of the lion. All who were sus- pected of Lutheranism were seized, and sum- moned to abjure their religion. Many preferred the flesh-pots of Egypt to the heavenly manna, and, abjuring the truth, came under the yoke of the Roman see : others, professing the truth, but fearing the persecution, left their country, and, crossing the Alps, sought refuge in Ger- many, France, and Switzerland ; of whom were Isabella Manricha di Bresegna, a woman to whose merits justice cannot be done, and Olym- pia Morata herself : others, suddenly taken, boldly defending the truth, confirmed it by their HER LIFE. 167 death. Of this number was Fannio, of whom it is now proper to speak." * Faventino Fannio, of Faenza usually said (though not correctly) to have been the first who suffered martyrdom in Italy for the cause of protestantism, which he had embraced, from reading the Bible, and other religious books, in his native language was two years a prisoner for the truth in Ferrara. He had once pur- chased his liberty by recantation, on the per- suasion of his friends, but gave, during his sub- sequent imprisonment, the most edifying ex- ample of firmness and resignation. To the lamentations of his wife and sister, who came to see him in prison, he answered, " Let it suffice, that, for your sakes, I once denied the Saviour. Had I then had the knowledge which, by the grace of God I have acquired since my fall, I would not have yielded to your entreaties. Go home in peace." f It may easily be imagined what striking be- nefit the infant cause of the true faith at Ferrara received from the instructions and example of this excellent sufferer, whose unwearied efforts * Noltenii Vita Olympias. t M'Crie's History of the Reformation in Italy. 168 OLYMPIA MORATA. in converting and instructing his fellow-prison- ers (some of them men of high rank, confined for state crimes) caused them subsequently to declare that they had never known true happi- ness till they found it within the walls of a prison. But our chief present interest in the impri- sonment and fate of Fannio arises from the fre- quent visits paid him during its continuance by Olympia Morata, and her illustrious friend, La- vinia della Rovere ; to whom, after the latter had removed to Rome, Olympia, in several let- ters, commends the cause of their persecuted instructor in Christ. In one she says " I am thankful that you have promised to do all in your power in assisting Fannio the more so as I know that your authority goes a great way at Rome. I trust, that even when you leave that city, he may not be left defenceless; and it strikes me that you might obtain the promise of the Duke to interfere, as a favour to yourself, in behalf of one who, you know well, is without fault." In another, she thus gently enforces the same suit : " You will act in this matter ac- cording to your own discretion : only, being yourself not unacquainted with suffering, I trust HER LIFE. 169 that will dispose you to bring help to the wretched especially to those who have become so, not on their own account, but for the sake of Christ since you are well aware, that what- ever kindness you shew to these, Christ will esteem it as done to himself." There is something very affecting and edifying in the spectacle afforded by two young women the one of princely birth, the other educated in a court, and, at that time, participating in all its delusive smiles passing, voluntarily, a portion of their time in the dungeon of a persecuted servant of God. And to his example and pre- cept there is little doubt the one owed much of the firmness of principle which enabled her to persevere in a similar course of Christian cha- rity, and " bear witness to the truth at Rome also ;" and the other, those lessons of meekness and magnanimity for which her own subsequent life afforded but too much exercise. Beside the lowly pallet and fettered limbs of the first Fer- rarese martyr, Olympia must have learned much of that knowledge (not of this world) by which her mind, as she herself declares, was, to her own astonishment, weaned from earthly vanities and earthly distinctions, and fixed on pleasures 170 OLYMPIA MORATA. and possessions, which the court and dungeon were alike incapable of giving, or of taking away. Fannio, after two years' imprisonment, suffered martyrdom in 1550.* The situation of Olympia at this perhaps most painful period of a hitherto prosperous life, is represented by her biographer in the most gloomy colours. " Distracted," he says, " with the cares attendant on a large and slenderly provided family, seeing no end to her distresses, and having before her eyes the spectacle of the above-mentioned persecutions, by which she was filled with but too well founded personal appre- hensions, she suddenly and unexpectedly re- ceived assistance and comfort as if from heaven. A young man, well instructed in the Greek and Latin languages, admiring the great learning and irreproachable morals of Olympia, paid his addresses to her, and married her, without any * It forms a striking feature of identity between the spirit of persecution at this time in Italy and in England, -as well as of the public sympathy for its victims in both, that while Fannio's execution took place, by order of the pope, at a very earlyhour, ("to avoid concourse,") the letter of Queen Mary, positively prohibiting that Hooper should be allowed to ad- dress the people at the stake, has been preserved by Burnet. HER LIFE. 171 other dowry than her understanding. Of his own he gave proof, as well as of his goodness of heart, when neither the enmity of the princes of Ferrara, nor her desolate condition, could deter him from marrying and carrying her to his own country. And thus was Italy as if she had made herself unworthy of so great an honour robbed of this distinguished female ; whom Germany, as a kind mother, gladly received into her bosom." Grundler, the fortunate person destined to deprive Italy of one of its fairest ornaments, and the happy husband of one who never gave him a moment's pain, save that he has touchingly expressed on the dissolution of their union, which he but a short time survived was a young man of good family and competent fortune in Franconia. According to the laudable custom of those times, he had travelled into Italy, to improve himself at once in those medical and classical studies, which, (if we may judge by the innumerable biographies left us by Melchior Adam, of German physicians, distinguished in both), went then almost invariably hand in hand. With Grundler this was peculiarly the case ; 172 OLYMPIA MORATA. and his familiar correspondence with the cele- brated men of his time the congeniality of his pursuits to those of the accomplished Olympia the invitation given him to return thither by the magistrates of his native city and his flattering appointment by the Elector Pala- tine to the professorship of medicine in the fa- mous university of Heidelberg, sufficiently attest the happy combination of liberal studies, with no ordinary skill in his own honourable voca- tion. His personal worth may be best estimated by the extreme affection with which he was able to inspire one so gifted and so accustomed to the most intellectual and polished society, by the melancholy blank she represents herself as experiencing during his temporary absence in Germany, and by her intense solicitude for his life and liberty during the perils they mutually encountered. But above all, the natural pathos of the letter, in which, on her early decease, he has vented his feelings to their mutually be- loved Curio, bespeaks the most amiable mind, and the possession of qualities fitted to render him a suitable companion to the wife whom he so touchingly deplores ; and whom he soon fol- lowed to a tomb, on which the grief of surviving HER LIFE. 173 friends combined, in one heartfelt memorial of enduring esteem, the virtues of a pair " lovely in their lives, and in their deaths not long di- vided."* Fearful lest by dwelling too much on talents and acquirements so far above the ordinary fe- male standard, we may have weakened those tender and exclusively womanly sympathies, which no gentle being of the sex ever better de- served to inspire ; we cannot resist quoting, al- most entire, the letter, full of genuine and inno- cent out-pourings of affection and anxiety, in which, during their first separation, Olympia expresses her feelings on the absence of her com- panion and protector. " How grieved I am to think, my dear hus- * One of the innumerable epitaphs dictated by the regard of their associates in literature and friendship runs thus : Of her bereft, who shar'd thy studious hours, Of her who strew 'd thy wedded couch with flowers, Of her who, snatched in deathless bowers to dwell, The Muses' gifted band hath gone to swell Her soul to heaven in pious faith resign'd, Her dust to earth in trembling hope consigned ; For thee what task remained ? what ties could stay Thy widow'd spirit from the realms of day 1 174 OLYMPIA MORATA. band, that you should have left me, and that you will be so long absent ! Indeed nothing could well have occurred more vex- atious or distressing to me. For though de- prived, alas ! of the pleasure of your company, my thoughts are never so busy about you as during your absence. I am in continual appre- hension of your meeting with some accident; and when did the evils of imagination not far out-do those of reality ? You know the poet's remark, ' Love and care go ever hand in hand.' Do, if you would free me from the solicitudes that torment me during your absence, omit no opportunity of letting me know how you are, and what you are about, for, as you well know, you cannot give me tidings of aught more plea- sant or more dear to me ; indeed were it other- wise I should deserve to be hated. Would I were only with you ! and then I might have it in my power to express far better than in words (which indeed I despair of doing) the affection I bear you. There is nothing, however painful or difficult, which I would not eagerly perform to HER LIFE. 175 gratify you ; and thence you may form some idea of the irksomeness of our present separation. I think I could bear any other trial on your ac- count more easily than this ; therefore, I beseech you, do all in your power that we may meet in your country this summer, as you pro- mised. If you love me as well as I do you, I know you will accomplish it ; so I will say no more, and spare you further importunities. Indeed, it is not from any doubt of your pru- dence, or readiness to do what is best; far less from a chiding disposition, that I have so far ventured to remind you of my anxieties and wishes." The rest of the letter relates to private and domestic affairs. Enough has been quoted to show, from the guileless and almost infantine tenor of this truly wife-like epistle how far from a pedant, or a precieuse, this idol of courts and academies was in the hallowed relations of private life. Had it been otherwise indeed, she might have been admired, courted, and panegy- rized, but never would have been loved ; nor would the memory of her gentle and feminine virtues have become entwined, as we find to 176 OLYMPIA MORATA. have been the case, with the very heart-strings of all with whom she had ever lived.* The opportune manner in which this con- genial connexion came, to rescue one so gentle and unoffending, from the avowed displeasure of the Duke, the slightly chilled, or at least sus- pended friendship of the Duchess, and the pain- ful spectacle of the discountenance, molestation, and at length direct severity to which her most beloved friends were subjected must have greatly enhanced in Olympia the feeling of affection towards one who bore her away from the storm of domestic calamities ; though only, alas ! to exchange them for bitter sufferings in a distant, and comparatively barbarous country. The ne- cessity for leaving behind, especially in such trying times, a mother whose widowed grief she had cheerfully quitted the court to alleviate, and a family of sisters, over whose education she had begun so successfully to preside, was a great alloy to her wedded happiness. But the * The superscriptions of the letters of her friends, in which the epithets of "dulcissima" and " dilectissima " Olympia, occur as frequently as those of " doctissimae," and.." clarissi- mae," and " modestissimee," in those addressed to her by strangers, sufficiently attest the warmth of affection which it was universally her lot to inspire. HER LIFE. 177 former feeling of regret seems to have found its best alleviation in the tidings she received of her excellent parent's unshaken steadiness (amid surrounding defection) in the profession of their mutual faith ; while her anxieties for her sisters were much diminished, by their reception into the family of her dearest friends. One of them, Victoria, was taken under the fostering care of her favourite correspondent, the illustrious prin- cess Lavinia della Rovere (of whom Olympia herself thus writes "I know not a more learned, or what is still higher praise, a more pious woman in Italy,") and -another placed under the equally eligible protection of Ma- donna Helena Rangone, of a noble family in Modena, long distinguished for the cultivation and patronage of learning* ; while her young brother, Emilius, whose tender age had deter- mined her on making his education her own pe- culiar care, accompanied her and her husband to Germany. For the beloved relations, thus scattered throughout Italy, the interruption of j[ intercourse, occasioned by the ravages of war, * The third, who remained with her mother, was, as we learn from a letter to Celio Curio, honourably and happily married to a young man of good fortune and family at Milan. N 178 OLYMPIA MORATA. caused her often to suffer extreme anxiety, which, amid her own engrossing perils and suf- ferings, preyed ever on her mind, and which she frequently entreats those of her correspondents, at all connected with Italy, to assist her, if possible, in removing. There are few things, indeed, more affecting than the hold, which, amid new ties and the most distracting cares, her beautiful though ab- jured native land seems to have retained on her affections. Love and duty, interest and safety, honor and " troops of friends," alike anchored her to Germany ; while disgrace and unkind- ness, with the still more distressing tidings of persecution and consequent apostacy among those once most dear to her, united to banish all hope, or indeed wish, of ever revisiting Italy. Yet did she, like every daughter of that fa- voured soil, to which, in one, and one only of her letters, she gives (with the illustrious con- queror of Carthage) the hard-wrung epithet of " Ingrata patria," carry even to her early grave, that " Dolce memoria delle paterae sponde !" which the land of the vine and the olive, amid HER LIFE. 179 all its moral and physical degradation, must ever irresistibly inspire. The betrothment of Olympia having taken place about the end of the year 1548, her nup- tials appear to have been celebrated in the middle of the year 1549. And now did her disinterested sacrifices of credit and court fa- vour for conscience sake, begin to receive, even in this world, their approrpiate reward ; in the kindness and consideration they procured her among the professors of the pure faith to which she had so nobly adhered. John Sinapius, her preceptor, and the friend and countryman of her husband, having about this time resigned, on religious grounds, his pro- fessorship at Ferrara, was appointed chief phy- sician to the Bishop of Wurtzburg, and went to reside at Augsburgh. Here he recommended Grundler in the strongest terms to Ferdinand King of the Romans (brother to the Emperor Charles the Fifth, by whom we have already seen that he was personally esteemed), to his counsellor and favourite George Hermann, and also to the illustrious and munificent family of Count Fugger recommendations which were N 2 180 OLYMPIA MORATA. so effectual, that the king kindly promised all possible patronage to its objects.* On the strength of these flattering invitations Grundler appears to have made a preliminary visit to Germany, during which, in that unpro- tected situation which the perilous state of the times rendered doubly distressing, was written the simply affectionate epistle from his wife, which we have already given at length. We cannot resist corroborating its gentle tone of conjugal entreaty by the following extract from a letter to his friend Sinapius : " I entreat you again and again, that you will not retain him who is dearer to me than life, longer than one month, but that you will send him back to me as soon as possible, that I may not die of despair. For he, who bore with * This recommendation to King Ferdinand, we find from a letter of her friend the Princess Lavinia, had been warmly seconded by her illustrious family, by whom Olympia and her husband were, in the meantime, invited in the most cor- dial manner to Parma. As a proof of the great modesty which uniformly characterized her, in one of her letters to Si- napius at this time, she says, " You will think I am always harping on the old string. But I do beg that you will not say any more in my praise, or present my poems to Count Fugger." HER LIFE. 181 great impatience my absence for two days at Terentia's, has now been near two months away from me, which you may believe has made me very miserable ; so if you wish to free me from many cares, you will send him to me with all possible expedition." Her wifely prayers must have been soon ful- filled, for her biographer tells us, that " gladly complying with King Ferdinand's invitation, and it being highly dangerous for them to re- main longer in Italy, Grundler and his partner repaired in 1550 to Germany ; taking along with them Emilius, the brother of Olympia, a boy eight' years of age. Near Augsburgh they resided for some months, under the hospitable roof of George Hermann, who benefited by the medical skill of Grundler, and ever after expressed his grateful acknow- ledgements by every species of good offices. Olympia writes at this time to the famous Lilio Giraldo : " We have arrived safely in Germany, where we have been kindly received by Hermann, counsellor to the King of the Romans, with whom we have spent some time, and my hus- band has cured him of an illness. I am very 182 OLYMPIA MORATA. happy, my husband is much esteemed, and our affairs are prosperous." Augsburgh, to which they soon after removed their residence, was at this time one of the most flourishing cities in Europe. In riches, its citi- zens rivalled or exceeded the celebrated Vene- tian or Genoese nobility. Those in particular of the Fugger family (above alluded to as spe- cial patrons of Olympia) were so prodigious, that its head, a few years before, during the famous Diet of Augsburgh, not only entertained without inconvenience, for a whole year, under his roof, the Emperor Charles the Fifth and his retinue but gave him, on that occasion, the os- tentatious proof of munificence (ascribed in his- torical fictions to so many wealthy citizens), viz. burning in his presence, at a fire of cinnamon, that monarch's bond for half a million of crowns. He was able, notwithstanding, to leave at his death six millions of gold crowns, in cash (much of it coined by himself, by special privilege, from bullion of his own), besides jewels, ships, and properties in all countries of Europe and both the Indies. It was of him that the same emperor who, on first seeing the town itself of Paris, had con- HER LIFE. 183 temptuously exclaimed, (in allusion to the supe- rior size and splendour of Ghent,) " Je mettrais tout Paris dans noon Gand," said, on being shewn the treasury of the former city, " I have a burgher of Augsburgh who could buy it all with his own gold." And truly he might well say so of one, by whom his own mighty empire, colossal as it was, had often in times of financial distress, been propped and sustained ! But it was not in bolstering monarchies only that the generous spirit of these burghers of Augs- burgh manifested itself. To found hospitals and schools on the most liberal scale was a com- mon thing with them ; and about the time of which we are writing, three brothers of the family purchased a suburb of Augsburgh, and rebuilt it with small commodious houses, to be let to indigent industrious citizens for a trifling rent. And this well known, far famed " Fuggerei" still exists, with its own walls and gate, the noblest and most unique of monuments. This truly ho- nourable family, (the founder of which in the fourteenth century, actually plied the shuttle in a village near Augsburgh,) had in 1619, so branched out, that there were forty- seven Counts and Countesses belonging to it, and four 184 OLYMPIA MORATA. stout stems of the rank of Princes subsisted at a still later period.* The style of hospitality consequent on this enormous wealth, and of which the connexion of Olympia and her husband with the household of the brother of Charles the Fifth, must no doubt have made them partakers was so princely, that it may be curious to dwell for a moment on an almost contemporary account of a marriage entertainment at Augsburg. " Truly I must confess, that in all my life I never looked on fairer ladies than these, of whom there were seventy in all ; each dressed in white damask to please the bride, and covered all over with chains and jewels, f And the hall large * Spiegel der Ehren. t Misson, who happened to witness at Augsburg, about a century later, a magnificent marriage ceremony, proves that in wealth at least, its citizens had not degenerated. " The bride," says he, "was loaded with gold, a chain (like that of some order), hung from her neck another, equally massive, formed her girdle ; every seam of her gown was bordered, and its bottom fringed with the same metal ; and her very head fantastically attired (in a manner hardly to be described), with a sort of wig of gold wire, at every intersec- HER LIFE. 185 and handsome, sparkling with gold and silver, so that one might take it for a paradise. In the evening, I attended a rich maiden home, whose father's fortune, it was said, exceeded two tons of gold. I was received by him as if I had been a prince, and nobly treated. Then as is the custom in the place, he conveyed me home to my lodging in a coach, attended with torches. I wished such a life might last many years." In such scenes of festivity the far higher views and pursuits of Olympia, (for at this very time she writes that, " she spends her time with the muses, and in her yet dearer sacred studies,") as well as the painful circumstances under which she quitted Italy, must, no doubt, have indis- posed her for partaking. Yet one cannot help here remarking, how gentle her prolonged resi- tion of which dangled a drop of polished gold, which sparkled with every movement she made." It affords a curious instance of a hereditary love for pecu- liar styles of display, that, in Augsburgh, at the present day, not only does the head-dress of the peasantry exhibit, as in many parts of Holland, plates of solid gold, but even the modish modern costume of its burgher females, is blended with a crown-like appendage of the same costly material. 186 OLYMPIA MORATA. dence in so polished a city as Augsburgh, must have rendered the transition from the luxury and comparative refinement of Italian domestic life, to the then rude and barbarous tone of manners prevailing throughout Germany. From the mi- nute picture left us in the autobiography of a knight who flourished even subsequently to Olympia's sojourn in Germany, and at a period when the additional turbulence of civil and re- ligious wars had nearly subsided ; we may infer that not only did excessive drinking, and deep gambling, and their consequent broils, with other vices common to a semi-barbarous state of society, almost universally prevail ; but that they specially characterized the courts of the petty sovereigns of that period. How beneficial was the change which the Reformation in some instances introduced, Olympia has recorded in her picture of the little hospitable courts of Rhineck and Erbach ; but that it was far from general, the testimony of the jolly chamberlain of the swindling, dissipated Duke Henry of Lignitz, too decidedly proves. At the same time other contemporary documents shew, that along with the gorgeous magnificence we have de- scribed, in such cities as Augsburgh there yet HER LIFE. 187 existed, in the ordinary accommodations of life, throughout Germany, a primitiveness and want of comfort, by which the absence of the " beau ciel d'italie" must have been tenfold enhanced. And few things could more effectually prove how completely higher interests, and the enjoy- ment of religious liberty, had superseded in the mind of Olympia, all minor considerations, than the total want of all allusion in her preserved correspondence, to a change, which to many of her sex, would have been so painful and annoy- ing.* But she and her husband were ere long to evince in a far more decisive manner, their de- liberate preference of that " better part which * Once only, and that without a word of complaint, does she unconsciously confirm the above statement ; by desiring Sina- pius, (whose daughter was about to become her guest at Hei- delberg,) to send her bed along uith her, as such articles of furniture were excessively dear, indeed not to be purchased at the time in the place ! A still more curious corroboratioifc of their scarcity is to be found in Misson, who says, that when travelling, more than a hundred years later, with a young English nobleman, the son of the Duke of Ormond, " all the way from Heidelberg to Nurernburg, they could sel- dom get any thing better than rtraw to sleep on ! ! ! " 188 OLYMPIA MORATA. could not be taken from them," over the most tempting worldly advantages. Through the in- fluence of their steady friend, George Hermann, Grundler received the offer of what his biographer calls " the splendid appointment at the Court of Austria, of chief physician to Ferdinand King of the Romans ; which they refused because they foresaw that there it would not be permitted them to profess Christ openly."* There is something abundantly honourable to the firm and consistent piety of Olympia and her husband, in the above simple record of so no- table a sacrifice of worldly interest and advan- tage, at the shrine of religion. But the human and natural wish to accept (if compatible with their Christian profession) a situation of such credit and emolument, evinced by the letter of Olympia herself on the subject reflects ad- ditional interest as well as honor, on the un- hesitating triumph accorded by the conscientious pair to the cause of their Master's service and their own immortal welfare. And it would be doing them great injustice to withhold a docu- ment worthy of the best and purest ages of * Noltenii Vita Olympiae. HER LFIE. 189 Christianity; one which, instead of a young court favourite of three and twenty, Paul him- self, who " counted all things but loss for the sake of Christ," need not have been ashamed to pen. " OlympiaMorata to Antony Hermann, junior. " Your father has most kindly written to an- nounce bis having obtained for us so excellent an appointment, that you may believe we would most willingly accept it. But there is one diffi- culty, I should rather say impediment, to our acceptance of it, or which, as it may possibly be in your power to remove it, I have thought proper to consult you, and request your friendly assistance. " You are well aware that we are soldiers of Christ, and have taken our solemn oath to his service ; so that if we desert it, we shall be liable to everlasting punishment. And such is the greatness and omnipotence of our heavenly Captain, that not only has he over his soldiers the power of life and death, but can even consign them to eternal condemnation ; nor will he suf- fer them for a single instant to be off their duty. Wherefore we ought to be especially careful, lest from fear of worldly enemies we forfeit his 190 OLYMPIA MORATA. protection ; or from love of worldly advantages, rush into dangerous situations, in which we may be tempted to commit crimes against his laws. " I most earnestly entreat, therefore, that by your own letters, or those of your friends who reside at Lintz, you will inform us if (as we have heard) Antichrist is exerting his cruelty in that place ; and if they punish severely all who do not attend mass, and who cultivate the true re- ligion. For our deliberate opinion is that we are not at liberty to conform to the outward worship of a perverted and impious faith, and at the same time profess to be Christians. If, therefore, as in other places, the inquisitors of Antichrist would there take observation of us, and wish to force us into their style of worship, we cannot go thither ; for by so doing, (as I said before,) we should sin against God. I beseech and intreat that you will assist us in this matter with your information and advice. Farewell." Truly might Olympia (alluding no doubt to this magnanimously rejected preferment) say in her letter to Anne of Guise, " Not that I wish to live again in a court, for that, if I chose, I might do here ; " and truly did she prove by the refusal how much the well-known perils and HER LIFE. 191 temptations of such a residence outweighed in her mind its temporal advantages. Circum- stances unknown to us, but no doubt over-ruled by Providence, also induced her and her hus- band to decline at this period an invitation from the inhabitants of Heidelberg ; the acceptance of which, would, humanly speaking, have averted from them much of misery and privation, but have deprived the world of the example of piety and resignation afforded by Olympia during the memorable fourteen months' siege of her husband's native city, Schweinfurt in Franco- nia. Thither they now repaired at the call of duty, and at the summons of its magistrates ; who, on a large Spanish army being sent by the emperor into winter quarters there, strongly urged their townsman, Grundler, to come, and, by fixing his residence among them, to afford this large body of foreign mercenaries the benefit of his medical skill. On their way, however, to Schweinfurt, they visited their kind friend, John Sinapius, at Wurtzburgh, where a great shock awaited them. Emilius, Olympia's little brother, fell from a very high window on some rocky ground, but, strange to say, did not suffer more than if he 192 OLYMPIA MORATA. had fallen on soft earth, and being wonderfully preserved by a kind Providenoe, escaped unhurt. Here Olympia gave herself up, in her usual manner, to literature, and, " knowing (says her biographer) no greater content, often continued reading the whole day." How agreeably to both parties these peaceful and refreshing studies must have been conducted under the hospitable roof of her early preceptor, it is not difficult to imagine ; as their whole cor- -ffespondence fully attests the great friendship and community of feeling which subsisted be- tween them.* Sinapius, like herself, was an * Melchior Adam, in his life of Sinapius, represents him as -a truly amiable person, and one who, even in his old age, was remarkable for the sweetness of his disposition and man- ners. He relates the following interesting anecdote of his sojourn at the court of Wurtzburg. " The bishop of that see was shot by an assassin, and Sinapius, who was present, performed the last offices of religion to the dying prince ; spread his own cloak on the ground for him, consoled him by recounting the merits of Christ, and exhorted him to for- giveness of his murderers. The prince, with eyes upturned to heaven assented, and immediately expired, in the open air, exposed to the sun, among some shrubs." Is there not, in the circumstance of the last moments of a proud catholic prelate, thus edified and consoled by the genuine Christianity HER LIFE. 193 elegant poet, and an eminent Greek scholar : and it was, perhaps, to a revision of her studies, with his friendly co-operation, that the " golden works" in that language, which she produced shortly after, owed their existence and per- fection. Among these, her biographer specially notices a Greek version of many of the Psalms " of which a few," says he, " only remain, and from which it is evident that she almost always imi- tated Homer. She generally used the heroic measure ; but there is extant in her works the forty-sixth Psalm, in Sapphic verse, which was greatly admired by the most exquisite judges." The curiosity excited by the foregoing eulo- gium, in the writer of these pages, to see for once the simple dignity of Holy Writ clothed in the heroic garb of Greece, having been gratified by an eminent scholar, it is presumed the fol- ot his protestant physician, without " bell, book, or candle," on the very spot of his assassination, something pleasing and honourable to the pure faith thus inculcated ? Few things are more striking in the general history of the Reformation, than the promotion of its professors to places of trust and emolument (even under .those of a different persuasion,) for their superior learning, ability, and conduct." O 194 OLYMPIA MORATA. lowing perfectly literal version from the Greek of Olympia will be equally acceptable to other female readers ; to whom it will probably convey (with enhanced respect for the yet superior sub- limity of unadorned Scripture) a high idea of the hitherto unknown majesty of Homer. Its connexion with the text has assigned it a place here. PSALM XLVI. {Literally from the Greek of Olympia Morata.) 1. My God is a helper of disconsolate mortals, their im- pregnable bulwark in danger, and their only soother when broken down by many toils. 2. Therefore, my heart, wilt thou fear no ill, though before mine eyes thou shouldst see at once the whole earth, and dark-shaded mountains, thrust into the briny flood. 3. For should the deep, with impetuous surge, overwhelm the lofty summits of the mountains, covered with dark foliage, and move the wide earth itself, 4. Yet is there a sacred fountain belonging to the city where God manifests his might, pouring forth a pellucid stream that shall gladden the golden mansions of the Eternal. 5. For He that is the King of men, and the Leader of the Hosts above, reigneth in His might in this city, and no distress or woe can reach it. 6. Many tribes indeed of powerful people, many kings come against us, with the thunder of whose tread the resound- ing earth is shaken. HER LIFE. 195 7. But He that is more of might, the strong in battle, the Leader whom all hosts obey, hath manifested himself as the helper and guardian of us and ours. 8. Ye people of every land, learn how glorious and admi- rable are all His works, both in the earth, and in the man- sions of the starry heaven. 9. He hath parted the armies engaged in fierce battle, He hath broken the crooked bow, He hath shattered the spear and consumed the bucklers with fire. 10. Look to me, saith He that guides the embattled host, see what might and what armour are mine, 1 alone bear sway among men, and among the inhabitants of heaven. 11. He that is superior in might, the strong in battle, the glorious Leader, whom all hosts obey, hath manifested him- self as the helper and guardian of us and ours. Having left their kind friend, Sinapius, in 1551, Grundler and his wife finally settled at Schweinfurt, for the sake, says her biographer, of being permitted openly to profess Christ. Here, in the enjoyment of peace, he adds, did she compose her " golden works," comprising (besides the sacred poems already alluded to) her Latin dialogues, two of which, where she supposes a conversation between herself and Lavinia della Rovere, are still extant, and the most interesting of which will be found trans- lated, in the collection (a scanty and fragment- o2 196 OLYMPIA MORATA. ary one, alas !) of her writings at the end of the volume. While on the subject of these dia- logues, it may be well to remark, that though the amusement, instruction, and solace in trying circumstances of the Princess Ursini were, as Olympia herself declares, the special design of the composition, and though they distinctly point at the domestic vexations of that illus- trious lady it would be doing gross injustice to one, whom their writer styles the " most pious woman in Italy," to ascribe to her (without the due modifications of fictitious dialogue) senti- ments of idle vanity and criminal discontent, which are evidently only put into the mouth of one of the speakers, to-be refuted and con- demned by the other. At the same time, their truth to human and female nature, render the admirable admonitions they draw forth, ap- plicable to any age and country of the world. In these elegant and laudable pursuits, the days of Olympia for a while glided gently and happily away. " She found at Schweinfurt," says her biographer, " a great many patrons, friends, and favorers, and began to pass her life sweetly and comfortably." And gladly do we pause to enjoy with her HER LIFE. 197 the short breathing time of refreshing sere- nity, graciously afforded to recruit the frame, and invigorate the spirits of Olympia, for a pe- riod of unparalleled suffering. How eloquently does she, during its continuance, expatiate, in a letter to her paternal friend, Curio, on the con- trast between her peaceful existence in her hus- band's country, and among his friends, to the latter part of her stay at court; during which, she says, she was much estranged from the pur- suit of heavenly wisdom, and even (probably after the persecution of the Duchess had put an end to such profitable exercises in her family) from the perusal of the Scriptures to the en- dangering, she remarks, of her eternal interests. It is probably to her deep sense of the perils of this season of sloth and negligence, that we owe the frequent and earnest recommendations to the female friends she left behind in the ener- vating atmosphere of the court, never to relax for a moment in the duties of self-examination and devotion ; and to encroach, if necessary for the reading of the Holy Scriptures, even on their natural rest. " If you have little leisure," writes she to her favourite sister, Victoria, then at- tached to the suite of her friend, the Princess 198 OLYMPIA MORATA. Ursini, " after your duties to your mistress rise a little earlier, and go to bed later ; and having shut yourself up in your chamber, go over those things that relate to salvation, for God commands us to seek, above all things, his kingdom and righteousness. Having done this, commit your- self to Him with that mind and faith, that reve- rence and honour, that become a Christian and a noble lady." Nor was it the younger sister alone, whom her fostering cares and bright example had formed into no unworthy pupil, that (at the early age of twenty-four) Olympia was qualified and prompted by Christian charity, in the " very spirit of love and meekness," to admonish. Not content with an affectionate message, conveyed in the above- quoted letter to her sister's princely patroness, that she should " seek relief, in all her cares and sorrows, from Christian philosophy," or with urging her, in another to herself, to " pay her whole attention (through God's blessing) to these studies, and implore Him to be her teacher in true religion" solicitude for her beloved friend's uneasiness under the absence and im- plied harshness of her husband, induced her to abstract from her own avocations sufficient lei- HER LIFE. 199 sure to write for her admonition the dialogues already alluded to ; in which the folly as well as sinfulness of earthly repining, and the im- measurable superiority of the joys of Eternity over the " light afflictions" of Time, are set forth with all the eloquence of the heart, and with a maturity of judgment, which experience in trials could alone, at so early an age, have produced. Alas ! it was destined to be ere long more fully ripened by perils and vicissitudes ; compared to which, the evils of court disgrace, or even expa- triation itself, must have seemed trivial. " Short," to use the words of her biographer, " was the pe- riod of felicity, and the most dreadful storm suc- ceeded to those halcyon days." Germany was at this time a prey to the most violent intestine divisions, of which religion was either the occa- sion or the pretext ; and the restless spirit of Albert, Marquis of Brandenburgh, had long ren- dered him the scourge of whole districts, which it seemed his congenial occupation and native element to ravage and lay waste.* Of these Voltaire, in his annals, gives him the name of Alcibia- des probably in allusion to the mischiefs he brought upon his unhappy country ; and Sleidan, in his history of the 200 OLYMPIA MORATA. spoliations Franconia was now become the scene ; and having, on account of its advantageous po- sition, thrown a large portion of his army of out- laws and marauders into the imperial city of Schweinfurt, he was closely besieged there by the Bishops of Bamberg and Wurtzburgh, the Elec- tor of Saxony, and the Duke of Brunswick. This siege lasted fourteen months, and in ad- dition to the already sufficient evil of harbouring within its walls, for so great a length of time, a lawless and mutinous soldiery, and to the perpe- tual bombardment to which it was exposed from a superior besieging force the unhappy city had to sustain the depopulating ravages of pes- tilence, the severities of famine, and was finally given up to the flames by its professed deliverers ; who entered and set fire to it at the moment when the retreat of Albert and his garrison had inspired the wretched inhabitants with delusive hopes of respite from their protracted miseries. Reformation, perpetually represents him as burning towns and villages, levying contributions, &c. The exasperation against him of the bishops is not surprising, since he had exacted of the Bishop of Bamberg " twenty towns and lord- ships," and of the Bishop of Wurtzburgh, more than " five hundred thousand florins." HER LIFE. 201 These may be best estimated from the natural and affecting details given in Olympia's own letters, several of which minutely describe their hardships and sufferings, as well as the uniform resignation and trust in God with which they were surmounted. It is delightful to be able to trace these to their only true and efficient fountain, by the aid of a letter, which (in the ninth month of the siege, and before the oc- currence of its crowning disasters of pestilence, plunder, and fire,) Olympia addressed to her friend Lavinia della Rovere ; and where, after enumerating a variety of evils, among which residence in a cellar, on account of the constant cannonade, was by no means the worst she thus expresses herself : " In all our evils we have been sustained by the solace of the Word of God, on account of which we have never looked back on the ' flesh pots of Egypt,' but chose rather to hazard our lives, when we might have been living luxuriously elsewhere; and although still exposed to these ca- lamities, yet, because we have a God always pre- sent with us, we trust that in his own good time he will set us free. Join your prayers to our's that we may be delivered, for we have been now 202 OLYMPIA MORATA. nine months besieged. That all these things have happened to us for our neglect of the Word of God, I cannot doubt ; for which cause it is certain that Jerusalem was overwhelmed to its foundations. Wherefore, apply with your whole heart to the Scriptures, which alone will unite you to God. Make but them your way-faring companions, and all other things, even the dear- est, may be left behind. Farewell, my beloved Lavinia, you are always in my mind, and can never be absent from it while life remains. " Schweinfurt, 4th Feb. 1552." The heavenly aid thus appreciated and im- plored was not invoked in vain. The first dread- ful calamity in which the devoted city (already grievously impoverished by the exactions of an ill-paid and lawless soldiery) was involved, was famine ; in the midst of which, as Olympia grate- fully expresses it, " by the kind providence of God, they had still the necessaries of life, and were even enabled in a slight measure to assist others." But to famine succeeded its natural ally and follower pestilence; and from the frightful epidemic which carried off one half of the population of Schweinfurt, the medical skill HER LIFE. 203 of Grundler was insufficient to preserve him. By this disease,* which in some of its symptoms wore a singular resemblance to that with which Europe has of late been visited, Grundler was brought to the gates of death ; from whence none, says his afflicted wife, save He in whose hands are the keys of the grave, could have brought him again. " But God," she adds, " taking pity on my grief, restored him without the use of me- dicines, for indeed there were none remaining in the place." Scarcely had her husband become convales- cent, when the increased violence of the siege and reinforcement of the besiegers, compelled them to take up their permanent abode in the wine-cellar, where they had formerly found a temporary retreat. " At this time," writes Olympia, " they threw fire night and day into the city ; so that at night you would have thought it was all in flames;" and this appear- ance was but too prophetic of the fate which shortly befel it ; for immediately on that with- drawal of Marquis Albert and his troops, to * In addition to its rapid and mortal nature, she particu- larly states that it "occasioned to many the loss of reason, from the violence of the pain." 204 OLYMPIA MORATA. which the harassed inhabitants had looked forward as to the end of their troubles, his ex- asperated enemies, having (apparently in viola- tion of some agreement) entered the city, gave it up to pillage, and set it on fire. Plundered of everything, unable to carry along with them from the wreck of their pro- perty, even the " smallest piece of coin," or to rescue, what to her would have been a thousand times more precious, Olympia's valuable books and writings, all of which perished in the flames the destitute pair were seeking safety for their lives in a church, which they naturally sup- posed would afford them the securest asylum ; when a truly providential warning, given them by an enemy's soldier, dissuaded them from their purpose. And gratefully does Olympia commemorate an interposition which alone saved them from perishing by suffocation, along with all the unhappy fugitives who had taken refuge in the church. While hastening, in compliance with the friendly soldier's advice, to escape from the burning city, they were stripped in the streets by some of his rude comrades, who left Olympia with only a single garment to cover her. But HER LIFE. 205 this was a minor evil, compared to the arrest and detention of her husband. " This," says she to her sister, " was the most dreadful mis- fortune that had ever befallen me ; for methinks if he had been longer detained, or if God had withdrawn his aid (for He restored him at my entreaty) I must have died of grief. I could easily have borne the loss of all our other effects, but in no measure that of my dearest husband." Rescued at length, as if by miracle, from the hands of a ferocious soldiery, and permitted to depart they knew not whither, the fugitives, after some hesitation, took the road to Hamelburg, a small village, three German (or nine English) miles from Schweinfurt, which Olympia reached, she says, " with extreme difficulty, without shoes, her hair dishevelled, her borrowed gar- ments torn, her bare feet bleeding in short," she adds (with the cheerfulness which never deserts her) " looking for all the world like the Queen of the beggars." When we consider the fatigue and exertion of this dreadful journey, in the sultry month of July, in fear of her life, and destitute of the most ordinary accommodations, to one accus- OLYMPIA MORATA. tomed from infancy to the " gilded coaches" in which she somewhere says the " women of Fer- rara love to ride," or to the luxurious litters, one of which, on some temporary absence from court, her maternal friend the Duchess was in the habit of sending for her we shall not be surprised at the fever which ensued, and which not only continued through all her further wan- derings, but probably paved the way for her early decease ; especially as the terrified in- habitants of Hamelburg denied them the rites of hospitality, and compelled her, in four days, to resume her weary pilgrimage. Once more, during its course, was the life of her husband, and, as a necessary consequence, she says, her own also, in jeopardy ; by their detention in one of the episcopal towns, whose governor had strict orders from his " most mer- ciful master, the bishop, to put to death all refugees from Schweinfurt." " Our heavenly Father," she adds, " once more heard my groans ;" and after awaiting in agonies of sus- pense, the result of a reference to the bishop, the harassed exiles were, by his permission, finally set at liberty. From this time forth, as Olympia gratefully HEB, LIFE. 207 commemorates, " God began to look favourably on those whom he had long seen meet (though still ' in the midst of judgment remembering mercy') so variously and severely to try." The most friendly and unexpected protection was extended to the fugitives by several protestant princes ; and while yet on their journey, the tidings of their misfortunes induced benevolent individuals entirely unkown to them, even by name, to send them large supplies of clothes and money. Their first shelter was the hospitable court of the Count of Rhineck, who had married Eliza- beth, sister to the Elector Palatine, which illus- trious lady (of whose own long life of sufferings, and resignation under them Olympia gives a most affecting account,) watched over her poor sick guest with the tenderness of a mother, clothed her from her own wardrobe " waited upon her" as she expresses it, " with her own hands, and was ever ready at her bedside, to afford her assistance and consolation." At Furstenburgh, the seat of those excellent princes, they remained a considerable time, and then seem to have been handed over to the en- joyment of similar hospitality at the little Court 208 OLYMPIA MORATA. of Erbach ; where, amid all the refreshing purity of morals and strictness of religious observance which genuine piety could inspire, was laid the foundation of a friendship which seems to have flourished throughout the remainder of Olympia's short life. For, when opening soon after, with maternal tenderness, her arms to the motherless daughter of her friend Sinapius, she enumerates among the chief advantages of domestication in her family, the familiar intercourse she would thereby enjoy with the beautiful and well-edu- cated daughters of the noble house of Erbach. Here Olympia and her husband remained in peace and comfort, till summoned thence by the gratifying appointment of Grundler, by the Elector Palatine, to the Professorship of Medi- cine in the University of Heidelberg. This city, where the harassed and persecuted pair were at length permitted, under circum- stances so honourable and consolatory, to take up their short-lived residence was then, as now, the seat of one of the most considerable univer- sities of Germany ; though from Olympia's letters it appears, that by the violence of civil war the students had been pretty generally dispersed. " At this calamitous and turbulent period," she HER LIFE. 209 writes from thence to her sister " the study of arms has completely superseded that of letters." But though the dispersion of many learned inmates may have robbed the place of its chief charm in the eyes of so ardent a votary of liter- ature, and though the seeds of disease had already been sown by hardships and exposure in her delicate constitution, yet. the wearied frame and harassed spirit of Olympia must have been, for a time at least, invigorated, by the pure air and smiling environs of a city, perhaps unrivalled in Germany for beauty of situation and surrounding fertility. It is true that at this period the Elector Pala- tine, the friend and patron of Olympia, was him- self too deeply involved in the exhausting civil conflicts of Germany to indulge in a magnificence, of which the ruins of the princely palace, built by his descendants on the eminence overhanging the town, abundantly attest the extent. But of this mighty pile, the older and by far the most picturesque portion was then in existence ; and the knoll on which the massy tower ascribed to the Romans, and rent for centuries to its very base, is arrested midway on its passage down the precipice, by a living wall of ivy, must then, as p 210 OLYMPIA MORATA. now, have afforded to the thoughtful lover of nature, one of the sweetest of walks, and moat magnificent of panoramas. It is true that the tangled and tasteful shrub- beries by which it has been covered at a subse- quent and more peaceful period, could not then have existed. Nor were its precincts associated with and haunted (as to the mind's eye of the English traveller especially they have now be- come) by the ennobling though painful memory of another protestant sufferer the dauntless and devoted daughter of James the First, and worthy namesake of a former Elizabeth of England whom, without forfeiting one gentle or feminine grace which could add interest to misfortune, she equalled in heroic fortitude, and excelled in enlightened devotion to protestantism. Those who have felt how completely, on visit- ting Heidelberg, every feature of its mouldering palace, and thicket of its silent deserted gardens, is interwoven with the memory of the short-lived bridal festivities, unparalleled reverses, andhouse- less wanderings, of an English princess, with whose misfortunes and excellences all Europe once rung will not wonder that the coincidence which terminated on the same spot the similar HER LIFE. 21 ?' perils of a kindred, though far humbler sufferer for the truth, should have blended them for a moment in one brief vision before the mind's gaze. On the same lovely windings of the here uniting Maine and Neckar on the same ex- panse of smiling meadows, bordered by vine- clad hills, terminating in the blue frame-work of the romantic Bergstrasse, the eyes of both must often have rested. But while those of the stranger pilgrim closed in peace beneath the friendly shadow of the palace of the Palatines, it was at a distance alike from her beloved Eng- land, and from the Heidelberg, endeared to her by a display almost unrivalled of conjugal affection and munificence, that its princely mistress laid down in the grave a head, which two crowns of earth had mocked for a brief mo- ment, but to fit it more conspicuously for an unfading one on high.* The description given by Olympia to her sister, of that Palatine Princess, whose personal kind- ness she had experienced, and whose trials had * Misson saw, in 1687, near Arnheim, in the territory of Holland, (with the respect due to the asylum of fallen great- ness,) the modest mansion erected for himself and his family by the Elector Palatine and King of Bohemia. p2 212 OLYMPIA MORATA. excited her warmest sympathy, is so applicable to the character and fate of Elizabeth of Eng- land, that with it we shall close the digression it probably at first suggested. " Now this most illustrious lady, of whom I have spoken above, carries her cross, and one which is not light ; and yet she is of royal lineage, from whence kings and emperors have sprung. But although thus highly descended, she is content with a more humble lot, and both she and her husband have often been called on to hazard their lives and fortunes. During nine- teen years she has seldom been a single day free from affliction, and now she is dangerously ill and her life despaired of. But being eminently religious, she always speaks of God and a future life with great desire and eagerness." The fortune which so relentlessly persecuted to the last the dethroned sovereigns of Heidelberg, had yet in store a calamity, by which to embitter the residence there of the unoffending Olympia and her husband. During the first year of their sojourn, the plague, which had previously raged so fiercely at Spires, as to occasion the removal from that city of the Germanic Diet, broke out at Heidelberg, and all whose circumstances per- HER LIFE. 213 milled, or to whom life was dear, precipitately fled. Olympia and her husband, anchored by no ties, and whose " occupation" (by the dispersion of the students) was " gone" might easily have followed the example. But weary of wandering, uncertain whither lo belake ihemselves, and above all, (says iheir biographer,) " Irusling ihemselves enlirely lo God, remained, and were preserved safe from ihe peslilence." Our recenl experience of ihe consternation created among ourselves by an epidemic, which, formidable as it is, must yet yield in general mortality as well as in posilive conlagion, lo lhal " plague" from whose scourge Europe seems now happily deli- vered may enable us lo eslimale ihe chrislian courage requisite for braving its horrors, and encountering, wilh harassed spirilS and enfeebled conslilulions, an enemy so terrible and un- sparing. But the mind of Olympia was fast ripening in the furnace of affliction, for immortality ; and even thus long before her early death, she spoke and wrote of its gloomy precincts, as of not only an approaching, but a " wished -for haven." There is in a long course of vicissitudes and ca- 214 OLYMPIA MORATA. lamities, (especially when embittered as it was now to Olympia, by the most distressing ac- counts of the persecution and defections at Fer- rara, and the spectacle, so painful to a truly Christian mind, of the religious dissensions in Germany,) something which not only reconciles the gentler and purer spirits of the world to a departure out of its troubled sphere but gives rise to that sense of longing aspiration after a quieter haven, of which the worldling, content to tread his thorny yet congenial path, thinks only as of the poetic dream of some fantastic visionary. That this feeling was at the time shared by some of Olympia's gifted correspondents, ap- pears in a letter addressed to her by the cele- brated German divine, Rupert Wolfgang, which bears this at once primitive and complimentary superscription : "Wolfgang, Pastor of the Church of God collected at Ehrenfriedsdorff, to Olympia Morata, distinguished for her piety and virtue." After suggesting the more usual topics of conso- lation on the death of an eminent and learned friend and relation of Olympia's, this truly good man thus proceeds : " But there are other causes which do not . HER LIFE. 215 only alleviate our grief, but blunt it, viz. the aspect of our present calamities ; the decay of our common church, and contentions among its chiefs, which encrease every day. When I think on these, I am kindled with such indignation, that I even desire to depart from this life ; were it not that we must pray to God to preserve to his church some ministers of sound doctrine. But when he calls them away, and snatches the pious from impending danger, we may truly consider it to be well with them; and say with Isaiah, ' The just is taken from the sight of evil he hath departed in peace, and rests on his couch.' " This letter derives a prophetic interest from its having reached the fast-declining Olympia only four months previous to the release of her own emancipated spirit from the woes of earth. But before accompanying through the details of a closing scene, worthy of the life it termi- nated, the heart-broken husband of Olympia, we must dwell for a while on the less painful sub- ject of the varied and interesting correspondence which, during this last year especially, of her valuable existence, she addressed both to en- deared personal friends, and to strangers of emi- nence. And it is impossible, even at the hazard 216 OLYMPIA MORATA. of another digression, to forbear remarking, how very delightful it must have been to live at a period, when ties, not of mere congeniality of pursuits, but of positive good-will and affection, seem to have united in one common bond, the members of what might really then with propriety (as constituting a distinct community) have been styled the " literary world." Kindred studies the power of drinking at the same classic foun- tains, not then generally accessible to the mass of mankind zeal for the advancement of that " republic of letters" for which each felt a real, not fictitious filial devotion, seem to have been held sufficient grounds for commencing and con- tinuing a friendly correspondence between those, who had never met, save on that common field of intellect ; while at the same time, opportuni- ties for personal intercourse between the culti- vated of all nations were greatly facilitated by the universal custom which prevailed, of travelling in quest of fresh information, from one seat of learning to another. By this migratory system, rendered compul- sory, alas ! in many cases, among the reformed, by the fury of persecution, it could not be but that much of the rust of prejudice and nar- HER LITE. 217 rowness of mind, ascribed (whether justly or not) to men of mere erudition, must have been necessarily rubbed off and dispelled. If all travels, even the least profitable, are said to open the mind, surely those undertaken by men of liberal pursuits, with the noblest views, and introducing them to the most congenial so- ciety, could not fail to make them, in the best sense, " citizens of the world." And if the friend- ships thus contracted to the tenderness and constancy of which the letters of hundreds of gifted individuals bear ample witness were cemented, as in the case of the learned men of the Reformation, by the yet holier bond of a common faith, a community of perils on earth and of hopes for eternity, fancy can scarcely picture to herself a livelier or more painful con- trast than they afford with the forced courtesies, the secret rivalries, and hollow companionships of our existing literary coteries. It is not that human nature is different, or that mankind have, on the whole, degenerated, but that lite- rature has sustained a perhaps inevitable degra- dation by becoming, with the progress of civi- lization instead of the cherished idol and household treasure of a chosen few a desecrated 218 OLYMPIA MORATA. object of traffic, deriving, from the bidding of the many, both its complexion and its value. In proof of a remark, to corroborate which might be quoted nearly the whole volume con- taining the correspondence of Olympia and her celebrated contemporaries, we cannot resist ex- tracting from it (though unconnected with her) a short letter from the mild, amiable Melancthon to her friend Curio ; as perhaps the strongest instance, not of good will merely, but warm re- gard, founded (by the writer's express acknow- ledgment) solely on merit on the one side, and appreciation of it on the other. And here it may also be remarked that the mild polished character of its writer was peculiarly fitted to harmonize with that of the Italian Reformers ; our whole acquaintance with whom proves their vast superiority in refinement and Christian gentleness over those ruder and bolder spirits of Germany and Scotland, whose very stern qualities rendered them perhaps fitter instru- ments for the overthrow of error amid a com- paratively rude and barbarous people. " Philip Melancthon wishes health to the illustrious Celius Curio. HER LIFE. 219 " Language being truly the image of the cha- racter and mind, I had no sooner read certain of your writings, and become acquainted with their noble eloquence, than I loved you before I even knew the place of your abode. And this regard was much increased on hearing from Lelius, not only of your great learning, but also of your piety, and constancy of mind and faith in suffering the afflictions consequent on a con- scientious avowal of the truth. My object in the present letter is to let you know that you are truly loved and esteemed by me, and that I am very desirous of your friendship. The affairs of the church do not look so ill, since there are a few learned men united in sentiment and true benevolence. Wherefore let us maintain our union and cherish mutual good will. I shall do all in my power to manifest mine for you and yours, and thus prove the sincerity of my re- gard. Farewell." A pleasing corroboration, and one more nearly connected with Olympia of the general sym- pathy among literary persons, on which we have been tempted to dwell, occurs in the circum- stance, that on hearing of the destruction of her 220 OLYMPIA MORATA. private library in the conflagration at Schwein- furt, a whole host of eminent men eagerly con- tributed to the formation of a new one. Nor was the pious office confined to sympathizing men of letters alone, but voluntarily shared with them by the chief booksellers of Frankfort and Basle. Numerous passages in her correspond- ence attest the pleasure which she was for a short time enabled to derive from the warmly hailed return of these long lost companions of her studies, and her gratitude to their dis- tinguished donors. But neither secular studies, however conge- nial, nor even the higher and daily dearer pursuits of preparation for eternity, ever es- tranged for a moment the attention of Olympia from the active discharge of the allotted duties of domestic life, or the most active exertions for the welfare of all with whom she was connected. On her arrival at Heidelberg, we find her en- grossed, with true matronly solicitude, in the arrangement of her new abode ; and no sooner was she settled in it, than, not content with the charge she had already assumed of her little brother's education, she gave to Theodora, the daughter of Sinapius (the loss of whose previous HER LIFE. 221 advantages from her society at Wurtzburgh her father bitterly deplores, in a pathetic letter, thus dated " exactly one year from the funeral of my beloved wife,") that maternal welcome before alluded to, and thus touchingly ex- pressed : " I most readily accede to your wishes respect- ing your daughter. She will be most dear to me, and her company will alleviate my hours of ill health in this distant and to me strange country ; and I shall have, besides, the satisfaction of think- ing that it would have been gratifying to your wife, who is no more. No kindness on my part shall be wanting ; and now that she is deprived of her mother, I shall embrace her with yet more than my former tenderness."* The same spirit of Christian and considerate kindness displayed in the foregoing extract, was yet more strongly manifested by the intended * It may be mentioned, (as a similar gratification to the )>erhap$ conscious spirit of her by whom the maternal office was so conscientiously discharged,) that the young creature thus fondly spoken of, was most honourably married to one of the counsellors of the Emperor Charles V. ; a connection on which Camerarius congratulated her father, as equally ad- vantageous in itself, and likely to conduce to her happiness. 222 OLYMPIA MORATA. selection (at considerable personal inconvenience) in the formation of her household at Heidelberg, of those whom she truly calls the " wretched and poverty-struck" sufferers from the disasters at Schweinfurt. And nowhere can we gather a more appalling picture of the extent of these, than from the answer of her correspondent ; in which he declares that the universality of disease, or its consequent debility, in his native place, had ren- dered it utterly impossible for him to procure there two females sufficiently strong and healthy to undertake the journey, or engage in her ser- vice. The united miseries of " war, pestilence, and famine," words which we, in happy igno- rance of their meaning, are wont to pronounce so lightly, may be in some degree appreciated from the following extract : " You must accept of one reply to the two letters you sent me, in August, from Heidelberg, desiring me to procure you women servants from hence, but in which I have been unsuccessful. The reason is, that all of both sexes have hitherto "been so sickly, that an immense number have died, and not a few are still dying daily. I never go out into the streets without meeting the sick, and those who are scarcely able to drag their HER LIFE. 223 languid limbs along, and seem likely shortly to expire. Within these few days Leonard Zeul has fallen asleep in Christ ; with whom I was the day before, admonishing him that he should take comfort from the kind and sweet words of our Redeemer and High Priest, Jesus Christ, who invites all to come to Him, who would enjoy eternal life. 1 trust he was enabled to obey me but why do I say me? even Christ himself, whose words these are. Lawrence Rosa and Louis Scheffer have also died, as your husband predicted. The latter was buried on the 12th of August, after having lain two days speechless. Sinapius exerted all his skill in his behalf, but in vain. What shall I say more ? Alas ! great part of our citizens not being yet sufficiently chastened by the extent of the divine wrath, God alone knows what will be its end. " The money which you sent shall be distri- buted according to your desire. The poor peo- ple in the hospital, about whom you enquire, are all dead, or dispersed by flight, and I know not whither they have gone. My wife and I have determined to remain during the winter, if God (to whom I give, and ever will give, thanks that I am yet alive) shall see fit to spare us." " Schweinfurt, 1554." 224 OLYMPIA MORATA. The writer of this truly Christian letter did not himself long survive this narrative of the disasters of his country ; and the pious sentiments con- tained in it, while they must have mitigated, fully justified the natural grief for the loss of so worthy a relative, which it was the object of the before quoted epistle from Wolfgang to alle- viate. But it was not to the relief of individual dis- tress alone, or the indulgence of private friend- ship, that the last exertions of the vigorous in- tellect and intense Christian charity of Olympia were directed. Besides the beautiful and never- to-be-forgotten appeal to her royal fellow-pupil, Anne of Guise, dictated at this period by the joint suggestions of pity for the persecuted pro- testants of France, and solicitude for the immor- tal welfare of her early friend numerous let- ters to her sisters to her scarcely less dear La- vinia and to that other member of the Or- sini family, of whom she writes to the Princess, " that the best human alleviation of her sorrows will be found in the society of that excellent wo- man, Cherubina," attest the fervour of her desire that all should share the ineffable consolations by which her own gradual and stedfastly fore- seen approach to the grave, was, even amid much HER LIFE. 225 of bodily suffering and mental anxiety so mer- cifully smoothed and cheered. To Victoria, her favourite and beloved sister, she, under these impressions, thus writes : " Oh, my sister, pray with the Psalmist, ' Lord, so teach me to number my days,' (and to have their few- ness ever before me) ' as to apply my heart unto wisdom.' Seek God while he may be found, call upon him constantly when you eat, thank him commend yourself wholly to his love shun the way of sin keep yourself pure and chaste, so that you may at length, as a con- queror, carry off the palm. Farewell, and over- come, my dearest Victoria. " Heidelberg, August, 1554." To Lavinia, her language, strong in faith, sound in doctrine, and fervent in Christian love, is to the same import. " Here every thing is in a state of warfare ; and every where the saints are pressed down by many cares. But all these things should be to us matter of joy ; for they portend that the pro- pitious and happy day is at hand when we shall together commence our everlasting life. In the mean time, let us devote ourselves to divine Q 226 OLYMPIA MORATA. studies ; let the word of God direct you to live righteously and piously ; take it for ' a lamp to your feet ;' and by this means only shall you avoid shipwreck, if you give all diligence to have greater fear of that God, who is the Go- vernor of all things, and can cast both soul and body into hell, than of feeble mortals, whose life is, in Scripture, compared to a shadow, to grass, to a flame, or a vapour. I recommend to you my sister, with the most eager solicitude not that through your means she may attain riches and worldly honours, but that she may be thoroughly instructed in the knowledge of Christ. The fashion of this world will soon pass away. Farewell, in Christ ! " Heidelberg, August, 1554." We have said, that with rapidly encreasing bodily sufferings, were blended distressing men- tal anxieties. Pious and well regulated as must have been the mind which, in sacrificing at the joint call of duty and affection, a beloved coun- try, could use (and in sincerity) such expressions as the following " We have neither expectation nor desire of again living in Italy, where Anti- christ reigns," "Since I escaped, by God's HER LITE. 227 g^ace, from the idolatry of Italy," "I have begged my mother and sisters to come to us out of that Babylon," and (alluding to her ever- beloved husband) " When God joined me to him who is dearer to me than life, whom I fol- lowed over the summits of the Alps, and whom I would follow gladly to the inhospitable Cau- casus," yet thoughts of home and kindred would often fondly and painfully intrude. And they found vent in a touching language, which, when compared, not contrasted, with that above quoted, cannot fail to impart to the dictates of principle a dignity and interest, of which a total absence of all feeling on the subject would only have divested them. To Lavinia, after a more than usual silence on her part, she thus writes : " By the strength of our long and affectionate intimacy, I again implore and entreat you, in the most earnest manner, that you will relieve me by a letter from the anxiety in which I have now lived for nearly three years about you ; which, I trust, you will now the more easily accomplish, since we are, at length, in a perma- nent abode, and in a place of more importance than formerly." Q2 228 OLYMPIA MORATA. In another letter to the same, she says : " I would write daily also, if I could, to my mother, about whom I am very anxious. I sometimes fear that I am forgotten by you, and so my anxiety is increased every day. And truly, if I had not that consolation which is found in Germany, where we are permitted to have books on theology, which would be denied us with you I could not bear up against my longing desires and solicitude for my friends, especially for you, who are ever in my heart, and of whom I never fail to make mention in my prayers." These natural and praiseworthy solicitudes about her absent family having been aggravated by a long cessation of intercourse occasioned by the war, (which she perpetually alludes to as interrupting even the limited communication of those days, when, alas ! for friendship, posts were not, and journies were the affair not of days but of months,) she thus writes to a lite- rary man connected with Italy, who had contri- buted to the re-establishment of her library : " One thing I entreat you to do as soon as possible, viz., to write about the affairs of Italy, and especially of my ungrateful country, Fer- HER LIFE. 229 rara. It is now fourteen months since I heard of my mother ; and although I have constantly written to her and my other friends, who are near her, yet no one writes again to me. I entreat you, therefore, to forward the accom- panying letters, and to endeavour to discover the reason of this harassing silence. This will be doing me the greatest of favours, and one which, I implore you, in the name of filial piety, to perform. Farewell." But, as we before remarked, the Christian charity of Olympia was too fervent and exten- sive to be bounded even by the circle of her numerous and dearly cherished friends. The interests of Christianity at large, and of its ex- tension especially in her own partially illumi- nated country, engrossed, even on a " bed of languishing," a large portion of her thoughts. One of the last exertions of her pen was that beautiful letter to Vergerio, the late Bishop of Justinopolis, which, while it corroborates what has been observed, both of the community of feeling then subsisting between the votaries of religion and letters, and our more recent re- marks on the truly Christian spirit of its writer will be read with greater interest, if ushered in 230 OLYMPIA MORATA. by a brief account of the eminent convert to protestantism, to whom it was addressed. Vergerio had been equally distinguished early in life for polite literature and diplomatic talent ; and was employed by the Pope as legate to the German princes and Court of France, and even in the more delicate task of communicating with and privately sounding Luther. He was a most able and eloquent man, and atoned for some tardiness in manifesting his sentiments (excusable perhaps in one of his high station in the Church of Rome, where a cardinal's hat was about to be bestowed on him) by ultimate devotion to the cause of Christ. This devotion was much strengthened by his having been one of the many witnesses of the awful death-bed scene of the apostate from protestantism, Francis Spira; whose unalterable belief in his own utter repro- bation, and the passive calmness with which he reasoned on its certainty, are even more ap- palling to the reader than the horrors of that despair to which such " fearful looking-for of judgment" naturally gave rise.* * This unfortunate man, an able and distinguished law- yer of Padua, having moved by worldly considerations voluntarily recanted his profession of the protestant faith, HER LIFE. 231 It is singular that Vergerio, whose conviction was begun by a course of studies undertaken for the purpose of confuting Luther owed, like many whom we have already named, his first thorough appreciation of the pure doctrines of protest- antism to the acquaintance cf the Queen of Navarre ; of whose " fervour and zeal in Christ, and ardent charity," he says, (in a letter to the Marchioness of Pescara) the most flattering ac- counts he had received from the most eminent judges, had failed to give him any adequate idea. It was shortly after writing this letter, (nearly the whole of which turns on the new views of religion which he had derived from the great knowledge of that princess) that, " having weighed " (as he says) " these words of Christ ' What shall it profit a man if he should gain either was, or imagined himself so completely " given up to a reprobate mind," as to be incapable of repentance, and be- yond the pale of forgiveness ; in which appalling conviction, (surrounded by the learned and sympathizing of all profes- sions, to whom his agonies read an enduring lesson,) he died. His life, with a valuable preface by Calvin, has been recently translated into English, and is worthy the perusal of every Christian. 232 OLYMPIA MORATA. the whole world, and lose his own soul ?' against all the brilliant prospects which fortune and papal favour held out to him he found the scale incline to the side of the gospel. " " Where- fore," adds he, " it will be better for me to ap- ply myself to the cultivation of those few vines which I have on the confines of Italy,* to encom- pass them with a good hedge and defend them, that I may gather some fruit to offer to God, than to stand without, idle, and wait till others resolve to undertake the care of the whole vineyard." This pious resolution he forthwith executed, by repairing, with his brother the Bishop of Capo d'Istria, (whose conversion by means of their mutual studies and enquiries, took palce about the same time) to their respective dioceses. But while the latter excellent man was soon cut off it was surmised by poison the conscientious discharge of pastoral duties by P. P. Vergerio, soon drew upon him first the suspicion, and then the accusation of Lutheranism ; and, deprived of his bishoprick, he narrowly escaped with his * His native country and diocese were near Capo D'Istria, of which his brother was bishop. HER LIFE. 233 life. Leaving cheerfully behind him, in the true spirit of the choice he had so magnanimously made, the most eminent rank in the Church of Rome, and even that cardinal's hat to which (as a possible step to the triple crown) the souls and consciences of many were in that age esteemed a cheap sacrifice he became first an humble protestant pastor in the Orisons, and was afterwards invited to Tubingen by the Duke of Wirtemburg. It will be seen from the above sketch, that it was to one not unused to "count all things but loss " for the cause of the Church of Christ, that Olympia addressed the following pathetic appeal. " I should long ere this have written to you, most excellent Vergerio, had not severe illness, from which I am now somewhat recovered, pre- vented me. But even had it continued, I could not have longer restrained my ardent desire of addressing you, having perceived from the pe- rusal of your writings, that your heart is ready and willing to assist the church. I have little doubt, therefore, that for her service, you will perform what I am about to request. Diffidence long kept me silent on the subject, as I feared to draw upon myself the suspicion of ostentation 234 OLYMPIA MORATA. had I come forward earlier. But I gladly hail the opportunity you have kindly offered me of addressing you. " Let me then, in the first place, offer my most cordial thanks for the books you were good enough to send me ; a kindness which leads me to hope you will accede to the request which I could not sooner summon courage to make. " It is to entreat that you will devote your well-known energies to the extension of the Church, by giving it an Italian version of that work of Luther's, called the Greater Catechism, already translated from German into Latin by Vincentius Opsopoeus. You must be aware of what great benefit it will prove to our Italian countrymen, to the young especially, if diligently perused. Therefore I entreat, I conjure you, in the name of Christ, that for the sake of those brethren for whom we ought to brave death itself, you will apply yourself to this task. Be- sides, being, alas ! not ignorant of the unfor- tunate contentions which exist at present among Christians respecting the sacrament, (which would be easily put an end to if men would only have in view, not their own, but the glory of Christ, and the safety of the Church,) I am the HER I.IFI . 235 more disposed to reiterate my request, for I think the work will be of the greatest possible service to our countrymen, provided you will give your able assistance in its translation ; which, with the greatest imaginable earnestness, I entreat you to do. " Concerning the affairs of Ferrara, of which you write in the month of December, I have learned much from the letters of another pious friend. Nor can it surprise us, who have had so much experience in temptations, that many should, under them, have gone astray from Christ. That my mother has remained constant amid these trials, I give thanks to God, and ascribe to Him the whole glory. I have implored her to come to us, along with my sisters, out of that Babylon. My husband is grateful for your continued remembrance ; his mind is exactly what it should be. Let us both have a place in your prayers. Farewell !" That it was not solely when weaned by mis- fortunes from the world, or in the prospect of approaching dissolution, that the heart of Olympia found room for the above Christian solicitudes for the religious improvement of her still dear countrymen, will appear from the fol- 236 OLYMPIA MORATA. lowing similar epistle, which, written long pre- viously, amid the distracting cares and anxieties of her residence at Schweinfurt, breathes a kindred spirit of enlightened and affectionate zeal for their immortal welfare. " Olympia Morata, to the pious and learned Matth. Flaccus Illyricus. " I have often considered, most excellent man, by what means I might be able to enrich my friends and others in Italy, with those good things which we enjoy in Germany ; and this, it has occurred to me, might be easily done, if I could engage learned men in the cause. You had no sooner become known to me by your writings, than the thought suggested itself of applying to you, as likely to be of the greatest service to my poor Italians ; poor in heavenly knowledge, and carried away by many errors. If, therefore, you could translate into Italian a small book, written in German by^Luther, in which he exposes those errors (which I would have undertaken myself, but for scanty know- ledge of the German language,) or if you would compose a little work from it in Italian, which you are much better qualified to do than I am, seeing HER LIFE. 237 you have perused that sacred volume, which I have scarcely tasted, from its original fountain I am certain that you would thus save many pious persons from the errors into which they are at present unconsciously led. If we are bound even to lay down our lives for the church, you will not refuse a work by which you will confer such an everlasting obligation on that of Italy, which is denied access to the original by ignorance of the language. I therefore entreat and implore you to undertake it, for the sake of Christ, who will consider it a benefit done unto himself; and who, though / cannot give you adequate thanks, will repay it with interest. I have only further to request, that if you should be offended by this application, you will attri- bute it not to my importunity, but to your own piety ; trusting to which, I have now written. Farewell. " Schweinfurt, 25th May, 1553." The attacks of indisposition (from one of which Olympia, in the first of the two above- quoted letters, represents herself as partially re- covered,) became, as is uniformly the case in that insidious disease, to which youth and beauty 238 OLYMPIA MORATA. so frequently fall an early and rapid prey, more frequent and severe; and the few lingering words of Christian kindness which we shall find yet hovering on lips soon to be closed in death, seem to have been extorted, by un- dying love, from an exhausted spirit and a sinking frame. To Infantio Barrensi, a literary man, and contributor to her restored library, she thus painfully, though patiently, expresses herself. " When in your character of Philotheus, you greeted me with considerate kindness, it was im- possible forme to reply, as I was labouring under very severe illness. Your books and letters were very gratifying to me ; pray accept my thanks, which would have been conveyed sooner had not ill health prevented it. Your letters were delivered to me in bed, from which I have not yet risen. I know not what will be the event but I resign and commit myself wholly to God ; and my desire is to ' depart and be with Christ.' The fever which consumes me forbids my writing more, and my time on earth is short. Farewell ; pray to God for me ; salute those Italian friends whose good wishes were conveyed in your letter." HER LIFE. 239 To her friend Cherubina she thus affectingly concludes one of those long and extremely edi- fying letters, which will be found in a subse- quent part of the volume. " May God, for the sake of Christ, grant that 1 have not written in vain. The pain in my breast has been considerably encreased by the exertion ; but I sincerely wish I were able, by my death, to be of service to you and others, in the things that pertain to salvation. Your OLYMPIA." The pen which traced these Christian and benevolent lines was, perhaps, the last which the trembling hand of the writer was ever able to wield. In the closing, and for this reason, most affecting letter of her whole earthly cor- respondence, she was obliged to employ that of her distressed husband ;* and, ere the following beautiful farewell could be even dispatched to its destination, the warmly affectionate heart which dictated it was cold in the grave-: * It was the perusal of this letter and the one above- quoted, translated in the appendix to the work of Dr. M'Crie, which suggested the publication of the present Life and Correspon- dence. 240 OLYMPIA MORATA. " Olympia Morata to Celio Secundo Curio. " My dearest Father Celio. You may con- ceive how tenderly those who are united by true, that is, Christian friendship, feel for one another, when I tell you that the perusal of your letter drew tears from my eyes ; for, on learn- ing that you had been rescued from the jaws of the grave, I wept for joy. May God long pre- serve you to be a blessing to his church ! It grieves me much to hear of the indisposition of your daughter ; but I comfort myself with the hopes you entertain of her recovery. " As to myself, my dear Celio, I must inform you that there are no hopes of my surviving long. No medicine gives me any relief; every day, indeed every hour, my friends look for my dissolution. It is probable that this may be the last letter you will receive from me. My body and strength are wasted ; my appetite is gone ; night and day the cough threatens to suffocate me. The fever is strong and unremitting ; and the pains which I feel over the whole of my body, deprive me of sleep. Nothing, therefore, remains but that I breathe out my spirit. But so long as life continues, I will remember my HER LIFE. 241 friends, and the benefits I have received from them. " I return the warmest thanks to you for the books you sent me, and to those worthy men who have bestowed upon me such valuable pre- sents. Had I been spared I wculd have shewn my gratitude. But it is my opinion that my departure is at hand. I commend the church to your care. Oh ! let all you do be directed to its advantage ! " Farewell ! excellent Celio, and do not dis- tress yourself when you hear of my death ; for I know that I shall be victorious at the last, and am desirous to depart and be with Christ. Sa- lute your family in my name. I send you such of the poems as I have been able to write out from memory since the destruction at Schwein- furt all my other writings have perished. I request that you will be my Aristarchus and polish them. Again, farewell ! " Heidelberg, Oct. 1555." This touching letter was transmitted to his beloved Curio by the same post with the tidings of her early and lamented death ; the particu- R 242 OLYMPIA MORATA. lars of which it would be sacrilege to give in any other words than those of him by whom she was as justly appreciated, as fondly de- plored. " Andrew Grundler to his Celio Secundo Curio. " It hath pleased the Lord, my most accom- plished friend, to fill up the measure of my former afflictions from the ruin of my country, the plunder of my goods, and the loss of nearly all my friends and relations by at length de- priving me of my beloved wife. While she was yet left to me, the loss of all other things ap- peared comparatively light ; but this calamity, like the huge tenth wave following all the others, has so entirely overwhelmed me, that I can find no possible alleviation to my grief. " She, indeed, departed with great eagerness, and, if I may so speak, with a certain pleasure in dying, arising from her firm persuasion that she was called away from daily affliction, and from a world of suffering, to eternal happiness. But alas ! I cannot yet derive consolation even from the remembrance of the pleasing and happy life we passed together. We had been HER LIFE. 243 united not quite five years ; but never have I known a soul so bright and pure, or a disposi- tion so amiable and upright. Shall I also men- tion her singular piety and learning? To you, who knew her so well, it were indeed super- fluous to praise her ; and, as it would ill be- come me to extol what was in truth a part of myself, I leave to others, and especially to men of cultivation and learning, like yourself, the pleasing task ; nor do I doubt that some con- genial spirit will grace her obsequies with an appropriate tribute.* " To this I will add my tears, when grief will allow me ; for there is a kind of sorrow, like mine, (and it is the greatest of any,) in which tears cannot even be shed ; but when the mind, * It is impossible to resist proving how completely mutual were these feelings and sentiments, by a short extract from his lamented partner's letter to his friend Curio, informing him of her marriage and situation. "Of the excellence of my husband's character, and of his knowledge, I should wish you to learn from otheri rather than from me. This only 1 can say with truth, that were I in the highest favour with my prince, and he most desirous to eniich me, I could not be placed in a happier situation than that in which (when de- spoiled and forsaken) I have now been placed by God." R 2 244 OLYMPIA MORATA. wearied and spent by an accumulation of disas- trous circumstances, is so struck down by some final blow, as to be absolutely stupified. In this state I at present am, unable for any exertion. Yet, since I am sure it will afford you satisfac- tion, I will try (though in truth I am scarcely able) to tell you briefly how she died. " A short time before her death, on awaking from a tranquil sleep into which she had fallen, I observed her smiling very sweetly ; and I went near, and asked her whence that heavenly smile proceeded. ' I beheld,' said she, ' just now, while lying quiet, a place filled with the clearest and brightest light.' Weakness prevented her saying more. ' Come,' said I, ' be of good cheer, my dearest wife ; you are about to dwell in that beautiful light.' She again smiled and nodded to me, and in a little while said, ' I am all gladness : " nor did she again speak till, her eyes becoming dim, she said, ' I can scarcely know you, but all places appear to me to be full of the fairest flowers.' Not long after, as if fallen into a sweet slumber, she expired." This heart-rending epistle, of which the re- mainder (containing a multitude of interesting particulars) will be found in another part of the HER LIFE. 245 volume, thus touchingly concludes : " Farewell, dear Celius you, who are happier than myself, in a beloved wife and sweet children." And it will deepen perhaps, if aught can, the sympathy with which this genuine effusion of human be- reavement must be perused by the most callous, to learn, that the same tomb which prematurely closed (in her 29th year) on its lamented object, was opened, within the year, to reunite beneath its friendly shelter the two fondest objects of her earthly affection ; the husband, who seems not to have been able to survive her, and the orphan brother, who must so sadly have missed her fos- tering care. Thus died, as she had lived, Olympia Morata with the patience of a saint, and the fortitude of a martyr; not with readiness merely "to depart," but with longing aspirations after that " better country," where the " wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest." Yet, without allowing its bright realities to withdraw, while life remained, one legitimate affection from its place in a heart, capacious enough to nourish, even amid the " poverty of time," ties worthy of being transplanted to their native soil on high. Having " loved" in the spirit of the 246 OLYMPIA MORATA. gracious Master whom she served, " her own," through life it was her's (like him) to "love them to the end ;" and the absence of all reluc- tance on her part to quit earth, could only be equalled by her anxiety to mitigate the regrets of those whom she left behind. " Do not distress yourself when you hear of my death ; for I feel sure I shall overcome at the last," are her part- ing words to her father Celio ; " I am all glad- ness," her dying whisper to the husband, whose features had but grown dim to her sight on earth, to be recognized in brighter lineaments where separations are unknown. If heartfelt posthumous tributes powerless as they are to the " dull cold ear of death " can (as seems fondly hinted by her justly proud husband) soothe and gratify the feelings of sur- vivors his must, for the short period during which grief allowed him to linger behind, have found ample gratification. Never was maiden bier strown more profusely with spring flowers by the hand of weeping playmates, than Olym- pia's by that band of tuneful sisters, among whose choir her name was, in trite but well- turned eulogies, perpetually incorporated. And truly, if ever a " tenth muse" (she of the " sa- HER LIFE. 247 cred shell" invoked by Tasso and by Milton) deserved or rather we should say, would deign to join the number of the fabled Nine, scarcely could she have found among the daughters of earth a meeter representative. Of the innumerable poetical tributes to her virtues and talents, poured forth by the various poets and literati of the day, we shall select two for translation ; both on the strength of their su- perior merit and felicity, and of the superior claims on attention possessed by their authors ; by the one, Micyllus,* as the most elegant Latin poet of the age by Curio, the other, as the paternal friend of her whom, almost from the cradle, he had loved and appreciated. It is needless to premise, that in these translations, as in those from the Latin writings of Olympia herself, the whole charm (said by those familiar with the * Mycillus, born at Strasburgh, 6th of April, 1500, held a most eminent rank among the learned of his day. He early taught Greek and Latin in the University of Frankfort, which he finally left for the Professorship of Greek at Heidel- berg, where he remained till his death in 1558. His tribute to the memory of Olympia derives value from his being styled by all historians, one of the best Latin poets of Ger- many. 248 OLYMPIA MORATA. originals, to be inexpressible) arising from felicity of classical expression, is necessarily lost or im- paired. The Elegy of Micylljis is in the form of an epitaph, and runs thus : Within this hallow'd mound the ashes rest Of Her, (bright leader of th' Aonian band) Olympia ! once Italia's fairest, best ! Led thence by Love and Duty's summons bland, Franconia's vine-clad hills her footsteps prest, Ling'ring awhile by crystal Maine, and Saava's golden sand. There, while vex'd cities felt War's flaming brand And thrones and altars hostile bands molest, Twice spoiled, twice captive, by th' Almighty's hand From death preserv'd His powlr her lips confest, Which gave repose at length on Neckar's peaceful strand. Alike by Nature and by genius blest, Born on sublimest heights of lore to stand ; Twining tho' at a simple maid's behest The Muse of Greece and Rome in roseate band Herself a Muse and by the graces drest ; Nor fame nor genius could the Fates withstand. Nor grace ward off the arrow from her breast Stranger ! yet these may well thy tears demand ! Invoke, through death's long night, her weary spirit's rest ! HER LIFE. 249 Such, elegant in its narrative simplicity, even in our, alas ! sadly inadequate version, is the tribute paid to Olympia by the famous Micyllus. In the following, by Celio Secundo Curio, with some mixture of the concetti, from which few compositions of the time were entirely free, will be found sprinkled a number of highly poetical ideas, to which but feeble justice can be done in a translation. EPITAPH BY CELIO SECUNDO CURIO ON OLYMPIA MORATA. Do'st marvel, traveller! as thy footsteps tread This hallow'd ground, with purple violets spread Breathing Arabian odours 1 Hid beneath, Lie flow'rs of heav'n that holier perfumes breathe. If skill'd in ancient lore oft didst thou hear Of that bright female band to Phoebus dear, Muses and Graces twin'd in wreath divine Beauty's bright handmaids, with the tuneful Nine, Whose soft ethereal breath each strain inspires That art embellishes, or genius fires. Behold this lowly tomb ! the resting place Of one whose soul partook of Muse and Grace ; 250 OLYMPIA MORATA. OLYMPIA nam'd by right of birth divine! FULVIA because ne'er came from Indian mine Gold brighter, purer, than (by griefs refined) 'Mid tempests shone the treasures of her mind Or else, perchance, because on early wing Like golden birds that 'mid th' immortals sing. She left earth's sluggish atmosphere, to fly In quest of kindred bliss, beyond the sky. MORATA, too, her name to mortals known As one that all her sisterhood outshone In genius, learning, and that brighter fame, Pure spotless life, and true Religion claim ! For this, the Lord who gave the earth to view For a brief space her virtues heav'nward drew First each pure thought, and then a soul so bright, With Him to dwell, in realms of endless light. There, rest and bliss are her's. Traveller, adieu ! Be thine such paths and blessings to pursue ! " To the long standing friendship of Fulvio Morata, her father, and Lucretia, her mother, and to the divine genius, learning, and true piety of Olympia, and to the grief of her sorrowing hus- band, these lines are inscribed. " She lived not quite 29 years ; and dying, de- parted to Christ, at Heidelberg, on the 26th October, in the year of the Christian era, 1555." HER LIFE. 251 With this one, among the multitude of prose inscriptions, perhaps more in consonance with the simpler and purer taste of modern monumental tributes, we shall close this brief memorial ; whose most impressive, and (if the intentions of its compiler have at all been appreciated) most appropriate valedictory words, will be found like the motives and groundwork of the charac- ter it commemorates in the pages of Scripture, " Go and do thou likewise." OLYMPIA MORATA. PART III. HER WRITINGS. Extract from the original Dedication of the Works of Olympia Morata in 1562, by their learned editor, Celio Secundo Curio, to Queen Elizabeth, of England. MOST Excellent Queen Elizabeth, patroness of the true church of Christ by whose labours God hath not only given peace and brought safety to your England, but hath also restored the celestial light of the gospel to the neigh- bouring nations ; of whom posterity will speak as of the most chaste and learned virgin, the bravest of women, and wisest of queens; in- duced by your greatness, I publish, under your 254 OLYMPIA MORATA. happy auspices, and commit to your trust and guardianship, these works of Olympia Morata a woman distinguished for her piety and learn- ing which, when on her death-bed, she, as relics of her genius, bequeathed and commended to me. For to whom could they, with greater propriety, be inscribed, than to Queen Eliza- beth, the most learned and religious of sove- reigns ? or under whose auspices could they more happily be published, and come into men's hands ? Accept, therefore, this gift, which, though inadequate to such eminence and greatness, is yet worthy of being elevated by the joint influ- ence of your rank and learning ; and from which your Majesty will easily judge of the rare eru- dition, ardent desire after true religion, patience under affliction, and heroic constancy, of the author, whose many other works of genius and piety unfortunately perished in the ruins of the country of her husband. From those which remain, however, we may derive a specimen of the rest, and form a judg- ment of them, as hunters are said to do of the size and strength of the unseen lion, from the foot- prints he leaves behind in the sand. To HER WRITINGS. 255 corroborate this judgment, I have added the writings of others, either addressed to, or relat- ing to Olympia ; that the opinions of the most eminent on her virtues and learning might con- firm, while they eclipsed mine, and lest I should be suspected, from national partiality, of over- rating the merits of an Italian female. I have further added to the volume some writings of my own, which, if they shall, as I hope, satisfy your most accurate judgment, I have no doubt will find acceptance with the rest of the world. Farewell, luminary of our age, and extraordinary example of ruling well and piously. Basle, 1st September, 1562. Preface, by the Latin Biographer of Olympia Morata, Georye Louis Nolten. I AM about to write the life of Olympia not Maldachina, who raised Innocent the Tenth to the pontificate, and, by means of him, governed the Romish church but of Morata, a pious, learned, chaste, and truly Christian lady ; who, regardless of the papal power, dedicated herself wholly to Christ, and became deserving of the 256 OLYMPIA MORATA. chief place among those women who united eru- dition with true religion. While at the Royal Academy of Berlin, my venerated father, for the purpose of improving my style, and knowledge of the Latin language, put into my hands the works of this Olympia, that they might excite me to more zealous study, by the example of that most accomplished young woman. When I had read and re-read these works, it occurred to me that I might with advantage publish a new edition of them, and thus hand down to posterity the memory of such a heroine. The scarcity of the volume seemed to demand this ; for since the last edition, which was pub- lished at Basle in 1580, no one had again printed her most valuable writings. Colomesius complains of the rarity of the book, even in his time ; for this eminent bookseller had only seen two editions of the works of Olympia, viz., the second, dated 1562, (which he supposed the first,) and the fourth, dated 1580, (which he considered the second). Irenseus Bibliophilus,* collecting diligently the editions of Olympia's works, confesses that he had only seen three. * The assumed name of Fred. Jac. Beyschlag. HER WRITINGS. 257 I have been more fortunate, for I have seen and read four editions, of which I think a parti- cular account will be acceptable to the reader. Celius Secundus Curio was the editor of the two first; and all have been printed at Basle by Peter Perna. The first of all the editions was published in 1558. I suspected that this edition was in existence, from the letter addressed by And. Campanus to Celius S. Curio, (published in Olympia's works, p. 209.) dated 15th March, 1559; I learned from the celebrated and learned Monsieur V. de la Croze, that it was to be found in the Bodleian Library ; and afterwards, the illustrious L. B. de Kamecke had the kindness to show me this very rare edition. In it there are many letters deficient, which must have been subsequently transmitted by friends, to Celius S. Curio, and inserted in the second and third editions. It has, however, this advantage that the Greek poems of Olympia are much more correct than in the following editions ; so that many typographical errors which were ad- mitted in the latter might be corrected from it. It is however, principally recommended by the dedication by Curio, to the famous Isabella Manricha di Bresegna ; which preface will be s 258 OLYMPIA MORATA. published entire in the new edition which we contemplate ; although the name of Queen Eli- zabeth prefixed to the subsequent editions, has rather obscured that of Isabella Manricha.* The second edition, which was much enlarged, was published in 1562; it is elegantly printed, and is preserved in the Royal Library at- Berlin ; but it has many errors, especially in the Greek poems. The third edition was published in 1570, after the death of Curio ; and is still fuller than the preceding. There are added to it eight Latin epistles of Olympia, two Italian, and two epitaphs ; besides many letters and orations by Celius Curio himself. Monsieur Maturin Veys- siere de la Croze, has shown me this edition, and has strongly encouraged me to the publication of mine. The fourth and last, of all others the most * Simler thus writes of Isabella Manricha. " There was at that time (when Peter Martyr lived at Naples) in its vi- cinity, a church dignified with very pious, noble, and learned men, and also many women of great] virtue, among whom, though I may be allowed to pass over other illustrious hero- ines, I cannot omit mentioning that most noble of them all, Isabella Manricha, who is now in exile for the cause of Christ." HER WRITINGS. 259 full and perfect, I am possessed of.* It is pub- lished in 1580, and distinctly modelled on the third, with which it coincides in the number of pages, &c. There are added to the former, only some fables by M. An. Paganuti, and some from Boccacio. To all these editions is added an epistle of Hippolita Taurella of Mantua, to her husband, Balthazar Castiglione, orator to the Roman See, under Leo the Tenth ; written in the most elegant elegiac verse, and most worthy of perusal. It is supposed to have been written by Olympia, though some have ascribed it to the husband of Hippolita. But before proceeding to the life and conver- sation of Olympia, it appears to me proper that I should give an account of the church, as reno- vated under Rente in Italy ; which the efforts of * this is the edition from which all the materials for the present volume have been translated and arranged, and its venerable air of antiquity, as well as its well-worn aspect from frequent reading, inspire involuntary respect. Whether the comparatively modern editions contemplated by the Ger- man biographer ever saw the light, the writer has no means 'of ascertaining. S'2 260 OLYMPIA MORATA. the Pontificate were not spared to extinguish.* And on this undertaking, I earnestly entreat the pious and kind reader to look with a favourable eye. LETTER I.f " Fulvio Peregrino Morata to Celio Secundo Curio. " IF human bodies were capable, as they are not, of retaining any sense, after the liberation from them of the souls, by which they were animated, I would thence borrow a simile, and say, that surely no mortal body was ever so distressed by the departure of its soul, and suffered so much pain in consequence, as I now suffer from your absence, and from being deprived of my divine * It is singular that without having observed (till her own work was completed) the order of arrangement here suggesting itself as ' ' proper" to Olympia's original biographer the writer should, from the same views of eligibility, have adopt- ed it. t This letter has been inserted here to prove, on its own delightful authority, the depth and stability of the hereditary friendship, to which, in the succeeding correspondence, Olym- pia so frequently alludes. HER WRITINGS. 261 teacher, sent to me by God, for my instruction and conversion. Nor do I believe that Ananias, the master of Paul, taught him with more holy admonition and Christian discipline, when he ini- tiated him into Christ, than you have bestowed on me. " It somewhat alleviates my distress to believe that I am indeed united to Christ, and that I am not abandoned by Him ; since, at that critical period, when I was forsaken on all sides, and in danger of sinking into a coldness worse than ice itself lo ! you were sent from God to take shel- ter under my roof ; passing by many greater per- sons who were ambitious of having you as their guest. It is true, that even in former times, I was wont, when at leisure (which was rarely) from my avocations, to snatch, in spite of bodily infirmity, and with age stealing upon me, an occasional mo- ment, and pick up by reading, somewhat of good from Paul and John, and the other sacred writers. But it was your living eloquence and mighty spirit, which, all sparkling and luminous, in a lively and efficient manner moved, affected, excited, and warmed me ; so that I have now lost my darkness, and at length am alive, and not I, but Christ in me, and I in Christ. From famine you have 262 OLYMPIA MORATA. raised me to profusion, and from cold itself trans- formed me into a living fire. Now, I not only feel that I myself am flourishing, and vigorous, and fervent but even that I am enabled to make others partakers in the opulence with which you have filled me. It remains that we pray assidu- ously to God, that He would preserve by his bless- ing the luxuriance of the good seed in our fields, without misfortune, to a joyful harvest ; and crown us with glorious fruits, to the praise of our faithful leader ; in whose grace may you, and all our brethren, live and prosper. Farewell." LETTER II. " Olympia Morata to Celio Secundo Curio Health. " AFTER being tossed about by many tempestuous waves, I am now settled in Germany, as in a port of safety; and as I have just learned where you are, from George Thracius, an excellent man of Pavia, I think I 'cannot too soon write to you, who are so much interested about us, and let you know every thing connected with our affairs. Your intimacy with and kindness to my dear fa- HER WRITINGS. 263 ther, while he yet lived, lead me to hope you will extend the same friendship to myself; and that I shall succeed to that inheritance, even as a son or daughter succeed to a paternal estate. " I must inform you that it is now upwards of two years since my father, after much suffering, with pious hope in God, departed from the tumult and confusion of this world. Immediately after his death (which was indeed a calamity), I was deserted by all from whom I had reason to expect very different conduct, and treated with much in- dignity ; nor did I alone suffer, but my sisters and friends met with the same unkindness, and saw, like myself, their labours and services re- quited with hatred alone. No one espoused our cause, and we appeared to be surrounded by in- surmountable difficulties. But He, who is to his children the best of fathers, did not allow me to remain more than two years in this desolate con- dition ; for, influenced by Him, Andrew Grundler, a German greatly skilled in medicine and philo- sophy, fell in love with me, and in spite of my forlorn estate, and the unmerited displeasure of the prince, made me his wife. He then brought me into Germany, where we resided for some time 264 OLYMPIA MORATA. at Augsburgh, with a counsellor of the king, George Hermann, whom my husband was enabled to restore from a severe illness. Thence, after a short stay, we removed to my husband's native country of Franconia, and remained some months with our relations and friends. " Of the excellence of my husband's character, and his acquaintance with the Greek and Latin languages, I should prefer your being informed by others. This only I wish you to learn from my- self, viz. that were I in the highest possible favour with my sovereign, and were it his pleasure to crown me with benefits, I could not be placed in a more desirable situation than that in which (even when most despoiled and miserable) I have now been placed by God. My husband is a learned man, well born, and was left by his father a com- petent patrimony ; and he loves me with the most sincere affection. I can only pray that God will be equally kind to my sisters, of whom I have left three (all marriageable) at Ferrara, with my mo- ther. My little brother, who is eight years old, I have brought with me, and shall endeavour, as far as it is in my power, to impart to him the be- nefit of a classical and Christian education. HER WRITINGS. 265 " All these particulars I have mentioned to you, not as matter of anxiety about us, but rather of rejoicing. " God has not only been favourable to us in our utmost distresses, but I even rejoice that all these things have befallen me ; as, had I remained longer at court, my salvation might have been endangered. For, while I was there, I was too much estranged from the study of things elevated and divine nay, even from the reading of the Holy Scriptures. But when by the malice and misrepresentations of wicked persons I became alienated from her who ought to have been my protectress, then things fleeting, frail, and temporal, lost all their attractions ; and God fired my mind with the desire of attaining that heavenly habitation, in which it is more delightful to dwell for one day, than to live a thousand years in the courts of princes. I then resumed my divine studies ; in proof of which I send you some poems which I wrote last year. These will prove to you how early God imparted to one, oppressed by so many calamities, the pleasing refuge of literature; embraced the more readily, that He had given me in marriage to a man delighting in literary pur- 266 OLYMPIA MORATA. suits. Let me beg, that in return, you will write to me most fully and familiarly all that concerns yourself, your wife, and family. Farewell. " Augsburgh, 7th October, 1550."* LETTER III. " Olympia Morata to the Princess Lavinia Orsini Health. " I HAVE received great pleasure from your letter, because, as I had long wished, it has put me in possession of where you are, and what you are doing, and because, before you went to Rome, I was indeed anxious lest I might not learn where to direct my letters. Since you have now relieved me from that anxiety, I give you thanks, my most grateful thanks, that you have promised me your assistance and exertions in behalf of Fannio.f It is indeed, 1 assure you, gratifying nay, most de- * The reply of Curio to the above interesting letter will be found in the early part of the " Life" of its accomplished writer. t Faventino Fannio, the distinguished sufferer and sub- sequent martyr for the truth, of whose imprisonment at Fer- rara, and consolations under it by the visits of these amiable correspondents, an account has been given in a former part. HER WRITINGS. 267 lightful to learn that you have gone to Rome ; as the influence I well know you possess there, affords me some hope. Besides I feel persuaded that even your departure from Ferrara may ultimately be of service to him, since I have no doubt, that on this occasion, the duke will be ready to promise any thing you desire ; and you can truly say that if he wishes to gratify you, he has only to pardon, at your intercession (which might even procure the remission of real crime), one who is entirely blameless. In this affair you will consult your own prudence and discretion, only being yourself not ignorant of suffering, I trust it will dispose you to assist the wretched ; those especially who are unfortunate, not from their own fault, but for the sake of Christ. For you are well aware that whatever benefit or good offices you may do to them, will be considered as having been done unto Him. I do not write much on this subject, feeling as- sured that you are as much interested as myself in the safety of the oppressed. I only exhort you that you do not permit the magnanimity of your mind to be swayed, by the most malevolent assertions, from those things which pertain to the true religion of Christ. " With regard to our own affairs, I have nothing 268 OLYMPIA MORATA. new to communicate. We are still living with Hermann, in a small town, one day's journey from Augsburgh, where I endeavour to mitigate the grief occasioned by the death of my cousin, and to relieve your anxiety respecting letters from me. It affords me true pleasure to write to you, in the leisure hours, when not occupied with my religious studies ; in which I take more delight every day. I congratulate you that you are going to Rome, and I do not doubt that the presence of your friends will alleviate those cares which at present distress you ; especially if you take with you that excellent woman, Cherubina,* whom I strong- ly recommend to your esteem, as well as to my own dear mother and sisters. Farewell." LETTER IV. " Olympia Morata to the Princess Lavinia Delia Rovere Orsini. "I WAS much distressed, that, at the time I received your letter, I could not reply to it ; for you are * Madonna Cherubina degli Orsini sister to Prince Camillo Orsini, husband to Lavinia, and a favorite friend and correspondent of Olympia. HER WRITINGS. 269 not ignorant how difficult it is in winter to find a person to whom we can entrust our letters. To this difficulty we have to add, that we are now much farther separated than we were last summer. For when you went to Rome, we went to Schwein- furt, my husband's native city, whither the senate had requested him to repair, to afford his medical aid to the Spanish troops sent into winter quarters there by the emperor. " From these causes I was not able to answer as I wished your dear letter, which excited in me mingled emotions of grief and joy. For, of course, I was at first deeply afflicted by the news of the death of Fannio, a man endowed with such admirable piety ; though my grief was after- wards alleviated by the thought of his matchless constancy. I was delighted to learn that you had taken with you and extended your protection to my dear sister ;* a pleasure which was the greater from being unsolicited and unexpected. Indeed I cannot on the whole say with certainty whether I have experienced more pain from the injuries inflicted on me, or pleasure from the pro- tection of God ; which, even when in the greatest * Victoria Morata, her favourite and most accomplished sister and correspondent. 270 OLYMPIA MORATA. need of counsel from above, was afforded to us, and relieved us from many difficulties by which we were surrounded, not only in Italy, but also frequently in Germany also. You know that Satan is every where besetting us with snares ; from which, were God to withdraw his protection, we could not escape even for a single day. Wherefore I give eternal thanks to Him who hath thus regarded us ; and feel my affection for you increased from your having, unsolicited, nay, un- thought of, not only wished to render us service, but actually performed the kindest offices. Again and again I offer my most grateful and affection- ate acknowledgments. Farewell. " Schweinfurt, 1551." LETTER V. " Olympia Morata to the Princess Lavinia Delia Rovere Orsini Health. "I AM ignorant whether you have received a long letter I sent you this summer, to which I added a dialogue and some works of learned and pious writers, for letters are very rarely delivered in these most turbulent times, which seem to be en- tirely occupied wkh warlike affairs Besides, we HER WRITINGS. 271 are now separated by a much greater distance than formerly. Therefore, my Lavinia, if I shall appear negligent in replying to your welcome let- ters, do not, I beseech you, ascribe it to forgetful- ness of you, to whom I never omit writing by every possible opportunity. I would also write daily, if I could find any one to whom I might entrust my letters, to my dear mother, about whom I am very anxious ; and I sometimes think that I am forgotten by you, and so my anxiety increases every day. And truly, if I had not that consolation which is enjoyed in Germany, where we are permitted to have books on theology which would be denied us with you, I could not bear up against my longing for my friends ; and especially for you, who art ever in my heart, and of whom I never fail to make mention in my prayers. I am anxious about your health, and afraid that you exert yourself day and night, as you were wont, and wear yourself out with care. It is on this account that, though much encumbered with many occupations, I have composed the above dialogue; that at least during its perusal, your mind may be abstracted from your own vexations. For I suspect that while the war is raging in France, your husband will have left you, and that 272 OLYMPIA MORATA. you will be distressed in your usual manner ; so I have interspersed in the dialogue (as you will see) several, if not all, of the circumstances which are likely to have occurred to you. I send you also some writings of the learned Martinus, which afforded me great pleasure, and which may inte- rest and comfort you also. Devote your whole attention (by God's blessing) to these studies. Implore him to guide your mind to true religion, and you will not meet with disappointment. Do you believe that God can lie? And wherefore should he make so many promises to all who implore his assistance, if he did not design to aid them ? He invites, nay allures all who are wretched to come to him, and makes no exception. Therefore lay aside that ancient error which we have heretofore held, when we thought that before praying to God we should first ascertain whether He had elected us to everlasting life. But, on the contrary, let us, as He himself hath com- manded, implore his mercy, and when we have been enabled to do this, we may certainly judge that we are of the number of the elect. Hitherto you have been inactive, but now awake from your slumbers ; and, oh ! consider not who the person HER WRITINGS. 273 is that thus exhorts you, but whose are the words of the exhortation itself. Again, farewell. " Schweinfurt, 1552." LETTER VI. " Olympia Morata wishes health to her beloved sister Victoria Morata. " BY God's love towards us, we are still safe and sound, notwithstanding the great disasters that have lately befallen the native country of my husband ; for which circumstance you, my Vic- toria, ought to give thanks to the greatest and best of Beings, who preserved us from the flames and the sword, and snatched us almost from the jaws of death. Were I to tell you the dangers and perils of war which we have endured, instead of a letter, they would fill a large volume. During no less than fourteen months we suffered the greatest possible hardships on account of the siege,* and were constantly exposed to the cannon balls. It would appear almost incredible if 1 were to men- tion the number of these fired in one day against * Of her husband's native city of Schweinfurt, in Fran- conia, in which Albert, Marquis of Brandenburgh, was closely besieged by a superior force. T 274 OLYMPIA MORATA. the town ; and yet it pleased God that it should thus long hold out, to afford the inhabitants an opportunity of reforming their lives; and, not- withstanding the length of the siege, and the small size and slender strength of the place, owing to the same gracious protection, very few among us lost their lives. " But, alas ! when (the garrison having retired) we flattered ourselves with returning to a state of tranquillity, the enemy made a sudden and trea- cherous inroad into the city, and having, amid a horrible scene of confusion, plundered it, they set it on fire. Such are the fatal miseries inflicted on once happy Germany by the feuds of her own unnatural rulers ! " In the midst of this terror and alarm, my hus- band and I were just about taking shelter, with many others, in a church, as a secure asylum, when one of the enemy's soldiers advised us to quit the town immediately, else we should be buried in its ashes. Indeed, if we had been in the church the smoke would have suffocated us, as it did all who fled thither. We, therefore, providentially took his advice ; but while endea- vouring to effect our escape, we fell in with a differently disposed party of soldiers, who not HER WRITINGS. 275 enly plundered us, but took my husband prisoner. This was the most dreadful misfortune that had ever befallen me ; for, methinks, if he had been longer detained, or if God (who restored him at my entreaty) had withdrawn his aid, I must have died of grief. I could easily have borne the loss of all our other effects, (though I had nothing wherewith to cover me except a shift) but in no measure that of my dearest husband. " Our Heavenly Father, however, heard my groans, both at that time and afterwards. For under His guidance we were led to experience protection from various Counts, governors of forts, and cities, who received us honorably, and fur- nished us with clothes and other necessaries. Among these, one is married to the illustrious daughter of the Elector Palatine ; and this noble lady treated me in my distress with such Christian charity and kindness, that she herself ministered to me when sick, with her own hands, and pre- sented me with a very valuable dress. Another of these benevolent nobles, not even known to us by name, sent us, while we were on our journey, a large sum of money, as a supply. By the kind- ness of these individuals, we were enabled to sur- mount our difficulties; till my husband was' T 2 276 OLYMPIA MORATA. appointed by the Prince Palatine, one of the commissioners of the empire, professor of me- dicine, at his university of Heidelberg, where we now reside. " This is one of the principal seminaries of Ger- many, though, alas! in these calamitous and turbulent times, the study of arms is far more attended to than that of literature. The bishops have still a large army on foot, and the adverse party one little inferior. Between them, they destroy, plunder, and burn up every thing. " In England, I hear that the pious are also much afflicted and that Bernardo Ochino, of Sienna, a true Christian, as I know, has been obliged to fly from that country to Geneva ; so that whoever wishes to be a Christian must bear his cross with him in all places. Indeed, I would rather endure any evils in the cause of Christ, than possess the whole world without him. Nor do I desire any- thing more than him though I am not ignorant that the hardships we have already endured are far from being the last, and that if our lives are prolonged, we must undergo many more; nay, even at present, we are by no means exempt from evils. One thing I implore that God may bestow on me faith and constancy, even to the HER WRITINGS. end ; which I trust He will do ; for has He not promised to hear my prayers ? I constantly pour out my soul to Him, nor is it in vain ; for I feel myself so strengthened and supported that I would not yield even a hair-breadth in the cause of religion, to its adversaries, who are in possession of every earthly advantage. Nor can I at all acquiesce in the opinion of those Epicureans, who make the name of the blessed Gospel a cloak for their sinful desires. " You see then, my dear sister, that these three enemies (as they are called in Scripture), the world, the devil, and the flesh, are never long at rest. But is it not much better in this short existence of our's, to suffer persecution with the Church of God, than share the eternal torments of the adversaries, where darkness for ever reigns ? Wherefore my sister, I again and again beseech you to have regard to your salvation ; and to be more afraid of that Being, who by one word created the universe who made and preserved you, and loaded you with so many benefits than of powerless creatures of clay, or the aspect of this world, whether threatening, or smiling and flattering. For what are all the things that surround us but vapour and smoke that vanisheth 278 OLYMPIA MORATA. or stubble and hay, quickly consumed by the flames ? " But if even you believe yourself already on the right path to heaven, beware of availing yourself of your weakness as an excuse ; for this is ingra- titude to God, and a disease is always aggravated by indulgence. On this account, David, in the 141st Psalm, prays that God would not permit his mind to wander in quest of any excuse for his sins. Where then lies your remedy? Trust your disease to the Lord, the true physician. Ask Him to give you medicine and strength, and to make you love and fear him more than you do man. Why is God so often called in the Psalms, the God of our strength, but that He can strengthen us, and make us bold, and alone enable us to acknowledge Him. He desires to be constantly prayed to, that He may be prevailed upon. Be assured that He hears your prayers, and will do what you ask, and more than you ask ; for He is bountiful and kind to those who seek him from the heart. " But beware my sister of despising the Gospel, and saying, " If indeed, I be one of the elect, and chosen to salvation, I cannot perish ;" as this would be to tempt God, who commands us to HER WRITINGS. 279 " work out our salvation" by obedience to the Gospel, and frequent prayer. For though election is certain, and the salvation of the chosen (which those that are Christ's feel in the inner man) is freely admitted yet is salvation not obtained without Christ, and those things that adorn the Christian profession. " Faith," says Paul, " is from hearing, and hearing from the word of God." He writes the same in his epistle to the Galatians ; and in the Acts, the same thing is pointed out that those receive the Holy Spirit who listen to the voice of the Gospel. Never forget what Paul and James say, "That the faith approved by our Lord is no inoperative and languid one, but that which by charity, is active and lively." " But if you are denied the opportunity of hearing, let no day pass without reading the scriptures, and prayer, that God may open your mind to perceive and imbibe those things which tend to make us live well and happily. Even if you have little time remaining after your duties to your mistress,* rise somewhat earlier, and go to bed later and having shut yourself in your The Princess Laviuia Orsini. 280 OLYMPIA MORATA. chamber, go over those things that belong to salvation for God commands us to seek above all things his kingdom and righteousness. Having done this, commit yourself to God, with that mind and faith, that reverence and honour, which become a Christian and noble lady. " Tell your mistress, Lavinia, to seek alleviation for her sorrows and troubles, and a respite from care, from the Christian philosophy. In a short time we shall arrive at the wished-for haven. Time flies, both in prosperity and adversity; and although our affliction should even be long and severe, let us remember that we suffer with the members of Christ, nay, with Christ himself. For instance, that most illustrious lady of whom I have spoken above, carries her cross, and one which is not light ; and yet she is of a royal lineage, from which even emperors have sprung. Although she is thus highly descended, she is con- tent with a more humble lot. During nineteen years, she has scarcely been a single day free from sickness but now she has been for several days so dangerously ill that her life is despaired of. Being however, a truly religious lady, she always speaks of God and a future life with great desire and eagerness; and she and her husband have HER WRITINGS. 281 often been called on to hazard their lives and fortunes. "Oh, my sister! pray with Moses in Psalm 90th, ' Teach me, O Lord, so to number my days, and to have their fewness always before me; that despising this vain life, I may apply my heart to wisdom.' Seek God, while he may be found call upon him constantly ; when you partake of his bounty, thank him. Deliver yourself wholly to his love shun the path of sinners keep yourself pure and chaste, so that you may at length, as a conqueror, carry off the palm. " Salute in my name, my female friends, both young and old. I will write myself to Cherubina. Write me a long letter, and tell me about your own affairs. I am very desirous to hear from your mistress, Lavinia, (to whom present my respects,) she is exceedingly dear to me, for her sweetness and piety have never left my mind. I have sent her several tracts, and especially those of our dear Ccelius, and am anxious to know whether she has received them, and whether they are acceptable. My husband, and brother Emi- lius, salute you. Farewell, and overcome, my dearest Victoria. " Heidelberg, 7th August, 1554." 282 OLYMPIA MORATA. LETTER VII. " Olympia Morata to Madonna Cherubina Orsini. "My dearest lady Cherubina. You will, I know, rejoice with me, that God of his infinite mercy, has delivered us from innumerable perils, to which we have been exposed for upwards of fourteen months. In the extremity of famine, the Lord so nourished us, that we had wherewithal to impart to others. He delivered my husband from a pestilential fever which prevailed in the city, and of which he was for several weeks, so ill, that had I not been enabled to look with the eye of faith beyond present appearances, I must have despaired ; seeing that the most fatal symptoms had manifested themselves upon him. But the Lord, with whom all things are possible, and who oft-times works contrary to Nature, was pleased to cure him, and that without medicine what- soever, of which the long siege had entirely exhausted the supply. " It pleased God to look with pity on my in- supportable distress; and often and often have I experienced what is said by the Psalmist, that HER WRITINGS. 283 ' He executeth the desire of them that fear him, and heareth all their prayers.' " You are not ignorant, my dearest Cherubina, that by the ' fire ' in Scripture, is signified the furnace of affection ; as is clearly shown in that passage of Isaiah, when our Lord bids Israel ' fear nought, for that He will be with them when passing through the fire.' And thus indeed was He with us, who have literally (not figuratively) passed through it. The Bishops and their ad- herents, having besieged Schweinfurt, threw fire into it night and day, from every quarter ; such was the unintermitting fury of their cannonade, that the garrison declared they had not witnessed the like of it in any former siege. Yet was God pleased during its continuance, so to invite the people to penitence by his clemency, that not one of the inhabitants was killed. Long did he manifest his power and goodness in defending us ; till at length, after having promised, at the com- mand of the Emperor and other princes, to dis- perse, the besiegers treacherously and unexpect- edly entered, and having plundered every thing the town contained, set it on fire. " But God delivered us from the flames also, and that by the counsel of one of the enemy. My 284 OLYMPIA MO RAT A. husband was twice made prisoner, and you may believe that if ever I knew sorrow, or if ever 1 prayed heartily in my life, it was then ! From the bottom of my anguished heart, I cried with groans unutterable, ' Help Lord ! help me, for the sake of Christ !' nor did I cease till it pleased God to hear me, and deliver my husband. Oh ! that you had seen me dishevelled, and covered with rags, (for they took from us our very gar- ments) and in the haste of the flight I had lost my shoes by the way, so that how I got over the sharp stones and flints God alone can tell ! Often did I say ' I can proceed no further, now must I lie down and die.' Often did I cry to God in my despair, ' Lord if thou wouldst have me live, bid thine angels carry me, for I myself can do no more.' It is still matter of astonish- ment to me, how I made out in one day those ten miles weak as I was, emaciated and ex- hausted, having been ill even before ; and now from fatigue I was attacked with intermittent fever, which hung about me during my whole wanderings. " But God did not forsake us, though despoiled of every thing, even our very apparel sending us by the hands of an unknown nobleman fifteen HER WRITINGS. 285 gold crowns ; and conducting us to other princes, who honorably clothed and entertained us. Now thanks be to Him ! we are settled at Heidelberg, (where my husband is a public lecturer on medi- cine) and we are almost as well supplied with household furniture as before our misfortune. " These things I have written to you that you may thank God with us, and observe that he never abandons in their miseries those that are his ; and thus be confirmed in your faith that he never will forsake you, should you be called on to suffer for the truth. For we must all be, (as Paul says,) ' conformed to the image of Christ,' we must suffer with him, if we would reign with him, and he only that overcometh can have the crown. " If you feel yourself weak, my dearest lady, as indeed I am myself (but the Lord makes me strong when I call on, and pray to him,) go to Christ, who, (says Isaiah) * will not break the bruised reed,' that is, a fearful and timid con- science, but rather encourage and console it, for does he not call to him all who are ' weary and heavy laden' with their sins ? Nor will he ' quench the smoking flax,' that is, a weak im- perfect faith, but on the contrary confirms and 286 OLYMPIA MORATA. strengthens it. Know you not that Isaiah calls him the strong and mighty one, not solely be- cause he once conquered sin, death and hell, but because he vanquishes them continually in all his members, and makes them strong also ? Why does the Scripture invite us so often to pray, and promise that we shall be heard, were it not that in all our evils and infirmities, we should betake ourselves to our heavenly physician ? Why does David call Him the God of his strength, but because he had made him strong, as he will you also. But He wills that you pray to Him, and study his word, which is the food of the soul ; for if the body loses its strength when de- prived of food, how must that soul languish which is not nourished and sustained by the word of God? " Therefore my beloved Cherubina, pray without ceasing, and read the Holy Scriptures both alone, and with our Lavinia and Victoria, exhorting each other to piety. Pray together, and you will find that God will so strengthen you as to enable you to overcome the world ; and never, from timidity to do any thing against your con- science. Pray also for us, (as I do even for the Christians who are in Italy) that the Lord would HER WRITINGS. 287 confirm and establish us, and enable us to confess him in the midst of a perverse generation. " Here there is great contempt for the word of God, and few there be indeed who care for it. We are yet like Samaria, which had the worship of God, and idolatry subsisting side by side. Gladly would I have had with me my beloved mother, but, alas ! war rages every where, and I must console myself with the joyful hope of meeting her in a better world. Here, as else- where, the pious must bear their cross ; may God grant us all faith and constancy to overcome the world. " I must tell you (to His praise) what a miracle I witnessed during the course of our persecution, when at the courts of various German princes, who had hazarded their lives and fortunes for the Gospel. Truly they lived such a holy life that I was filled with astonishment. One prince in particular, not content with maintaining preachers in his city, and being himself the most regular in attendance on them, every morning before breakfast, assembled all his family without allowing one to be absent, and after having read to them a chapter of the Gospel or of the Epistles of St. Paul, knelt down with all his Court, and 288 OLYMPIA MORATA. offered up prayers to God. Besides which, all his subjects are duly catechised from house to house, with their children and servants, so that they may give a reason for the faith that is in them, and that it may be seen if they make progress in Religion, for, says their good prince, were he to act otherwise, he should be accountable for the souls of the meanest of his subjects. Would that all kings and princes only resembled him !* " May the Lord grant you increase of faith and knowledge, for which increase we ought, you know, constantly to pray ; and on account of * This testimony to the piety and merits of these exem- plary princes, is thus corroborated by Campano, in a letter to the Editor of Olympia's works. " Nor can I pass over in silence the honorable mention made in them of the generous Counts of Erbach, because I know all that is said of them to be strictly true. They were not less endowed with erudition than with singular piety and constancy ; and" (while con- versing with him on the affairs of the Reformation) " I have, never in my life met with more accuracy of investigation, or more acute judgment than in these princes. One of their chaplains assured me he had learned more from his lord, than in six years at Wittemberg. They also lived in the utmost fraternal concord and unity, which is truly said in Scripture, to be a ' good and pleasant thing.' " HER WRITINGS. 289 which advance religion is called the * way of the Lord.' in which we are not to stand still, as if we were already perfect, but ever walk steadily forward, and aim at further perfection. Above all, diligently study the Scriptures. " Emilius, thanks be to God, is well and hearty. I trust he will fear God, for he listens most willingly to instruction, and delights in reading the Bible. My constant prayer for him, and for all my house, is that they may fear the Lord ! My husband, my brother and myself, salute you from the heart. The Lady Lavinia, if inclined to write to me, may now easily find opportunity ; as this city is celebrated both for its Court and its University. Farewell. Tour OLT MPIA. Heidelberg, 8th August, 1554." LETTER VIII. "Olympia Morata wishes health in Jesus Christ to Ccelius Secundus Curio. " I think it unnecessary to apologise for not hav- ing answered the letters you kindly sent me, since this war by which we have been for fourteen months 290 OLYMPIA MORATA. so harassed, though we happily escaped uninjured, will be a sufficient excuse. No sooner had Albert, Marquis of Brandenburgh stationed his army at Schweinfurt, on account of its advantageous situ- ation, than his enemies, who were superior in force, laid siege to the city, and attempted to take it by storm. They continued night and day to batter the walls with their engines, while on the other hand, we within them were exposed to many in- juries from the soldiers of the Marquis; so that no one was safe in his own house. " The troops not being paid their arrears, threat- ened to indemnify themselves by plundering the citizens, as if they had had any share in their pre- sent extremities ; and the resources of the city being completely exhausted in supporting so large a garrison, a very grievous disease broke out in consequence ; which attacked almost all the inha- bitants, occasioning to many the loss of reason from the pain, and carrying off one half of the po- pulation. My beloved husband was among the sufferers, so that his life was despaired of ; but God taking pity upon my grief, restored him with- out the use of medicines, for indeed there were none remaining in the town. " But one evil is often but the beginning of an- HEE WRITINGS. 291 other, for after his recovery, we were besieged by a still more numerous army, who threw fire, night and day into the city, so that at night you would have thought it was all in flames ; and we were com- pelled to take up our abode in a wine cellar. And when at length the departure of the Marquis and his forces by night had given us hopes of a happy termination of the war no sooner had he with- drawn, than the very next day, the troops of the bishops and of Nuremburg entered the city, and having pillaged, set it on fire. " God, however, delivered us from the midst of the flames, by means of one of the enemy's soldiers, who advised us to quit the city before it should be entirely consumed. We took his advice and de- parted, plundered of every thing, and in such des- titution, that we could not carry with us the smallest piece of money; nay our clothes were forcibly torn from us in the middle of the street, nor had I any thing left to cover me but a linen shift. " No sooner had we escaped from the city, than my husband was taken prisoner, nor could I by any means procure his ransom. I could only, as I saw him taken from before me, pray to God, with tears and groans unutterable, who was pleased to restore him to me. On quitting Schweinfurt, we 292 OLYMPIA MORATA. knew not whither to go at length we directed our steps to Hamelburg, which I reached with great difficulty, this little town being three leagues distant from Schweinfurt ; its citizens re- ceived us very reluctantly, being prohibited from extending to us the least hospitality. " When I entered this place barefooted, with my hair in disorder, and my gown, which was not even my own, but lent me by a woman, torn, I looked like the queen of the beggars. From the fatigue of the journey, I was seized with a fever, which hung about me during all my further wanderings ; for the people of Hamelburg being too apprehen- sive for themselves to render our longer stay pos- sible, four days after, I was obliged, ill as I was, to resume my journey. " Being compelled, in the course of it, to pass through one of the episcopal towns, my husband was once more made prisoner by the bishop's lieutenant, who told us he had strict orders from his most merciful master, to put to death all who should fly thither from Schweinfurt. You may think, therefore, in what agitation between hope and fear we remained prisoners, until the bishop sent an order to dismiss us ; and then at length God was pleased to begin to favour us. HER WRITINGS. 293 " He first conducted us to the protection of the noble Count of Rhineck, and afterwards to that of the illustrious Count of Erbach, both of whom (who had often hazarded their own fortunes and lives for Christianity) received us frankly, and loaded us with many presents. We remained some time with them until my health was recruited, and my husband admitted to the University of Heidelberg, where he had been appointed Professor of Medicine. " I have now given you an epitome of our troubles ; further particulars of which you shall have another time. Many thanks for the books you sent me, which were most acceptable ; but alas ! they perished in the flames along with our other effects. Present my compliments to your wife and children. " Heidelberg, 25th August." LETTER IX. " Olympia Morata to Celio Secundo Curio. "SoME days ago I wrote you a long letter, in which I gave you an account of our sufferings from the calamities of war, so I shall now be very laconic. I have only to entreat you earnestly 294 OLYMPIA MOBATA. that along with the other books which we are de- sirous to have sent to us, you will confer on us a great favour by adding " Commentaries on the Lamentations of Jeremiah, by a very learned man of the present age. Farewell." LETTER X. " Celio Secundo Curio to Olympia Morata. " You have too just an excuse, my dearest Olym- pia, for not having answered my letters, and such as (if I may so speak without impropriety) I truly wish had been wanting. But what do I say ? we indeed are ignorant, as he himself saith, of the motives for the decrees of God, but to Him they are not unknown ; and therefore do we submit ourselves unhesitatingly to his divine judgment, and adore his counsels as just, though they tran- scend our knowledge. " Your letter affords, indeed, two remarkable examples of the joint severity and clemency of God. Severity in your banishment from your country ; and clemency and benevolence in your being saved from the flames, and from such im- minent dangers. I have no doubt that some time hence, nay, even at the present moment, from the HER WRITINGS. 296 power of faith which so strongly influences your pious mind, you will become sensible how great is that Divine Providence which is ever present to those who labour and are in distress. Especially since God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and our Father, had compassion on you when most severely afflicted, and restored from an apparently fatal disease (and that without the means of em- ploying any human remedy) your dear and ex- cellent husband ; and also since the same God twice delivered him from captivity in compliance with your earnest prayers and unspeakable la- mentations ; when by him you were conducted to those excellent and pious great men by whom your calamity was somewhat alleviated ; and in fine, when being summoned by that wise prince, the Elector Palatine, your harassed husband was chosen by the University of Heidelburg to teach in that celebrated school, the science of medicine. " And although spoiled and deprived of all your worldly goods, you with difficulty escaped from the flames, have you not retained (along with your inestimable husband) all that, in the words of Bias* the Priennian, deserves to be accounted * One of the seven wise men of Greece. 296 OLYMPIA MORATA. valuable your genius, your learning, your wis- dom, your innocence, your piety, your faith, and the rest of your real treasures ? Truly you have left behind the goods of fortune, your playthings, which are not worthy to be considered as posses- sions these, indeed, have been seized by the enemy, which, had they been really and intrin- sically yours, could never have happened. But as affairs now stand, your personal safety being insured, I am far from being disposed to grieve on your account, and I feel persuaded that you will think as I do, and give thanks to God, your preserver ; and that your piety and gratitude will be proportioned to your past sufferings, calamities, and dangers. " I have given directions to our booksellers that on my account you may receive whatever you require. Homer and several other books have been sent for you to Frankfort as presents. If to be found in that city, I have taken care that you shall have the Commentaries on the Lamentations of Jeremiah, that with him you may lament over your husband's country. Remember that we have sent to you whatever remains of Sophocles, as a laurel which you have well deserved. "The person who delivers you this letter is named HER WRITINGS. 297 John Herold. He is extremely desirous to see you, and has requested that I would, by my letter, open the door of friendship, that he might be allowed to worship at the sacred shrine. I pray you to receive him in the light of a friend, so that he may learn that he owes his reception not merely to your hospitality, but in some measure to my recommendation. Inform me, I pray you, what has become of your brother Emilius, and what accounts you have of your mother and sisters. My wife and children, whom you desire me to salute in your name, salute you in return, and from the heart wish you all good and honourable things. Farewell, my Olympia, live the ornament of our Italy ! " Basle, September, 1554." LETTER X. " Olympia Fulvia Morata to the Most Illus- trious Lavinia della Rovere, wishes health through our Lord Jesus Christ. "I CANNOT sufficiently express my surprise, most illustrious Lavinia, that you have never sent me any letters except one, since you left Ferrara, unless, indeed, this destructive war with which we 298 OLYMPIA MORATA. are so annoyed may be considered an excuse. For I cannot suspect any change in your kind friendship towards me, which, I trust, is equally mutual and sincere. I, on the contrary, have frequently written to you, and sent you a dialogue composed by me, and also the works of some very learned men, but hitherto I have never been able to elicit a letter from you, though I have learnt from those friends to whom I wrote to enquire about you, that you were still in existence. There- fore, on account of our very great intimacy, I again beg and entreat you, in the most earnest manner, that you will relieve me by a letter, from the anxiety which I have suffered for nearly three years respecting you ; which I believe will now be the more easily accomplished that we are in a place of more importance than formerly, whither we should not have come had we not been com- pelled by the calamities which we sustained from the war, the extent of which, and our severe pres- sure of suffering, you will learn from the letters I have written to Celio Secundo Curio. For I did not consider it necessary to write the same things to you. since you might obtain every infor- mation from him, and at the same time perceive that you had many companions in misery. HER WRITINGS. 299 " Believe me, there is no one, especially if he desires to live piously in Christ, who does not suffer the severest misfortunes and calamities. We are often forced to become wanderers, but yet we never can fly from the devil and the world ; nay, what does the poet say ? Vain to fly care, the golden galley's speed Or rapid bounding of the proudest steed : even so do we carry along with us at all times our old Adam and our sin. Wherefore we ought, at all times, to pray to God lest we be overcome by such powerful evils. If, on the other hand, we give ourselves up to languor and sloth, when we ought to be fighting, we shall easily sink under our perils, and perish to all eternity. This is what you must be on your guard against, and you ought to attend with great diligence to the Scriptures, and pray often to God that you may not follow the example of the multitude of impious persons of whom the world is full ; but let the word of God direct you to live righteously and piously, and let it be a lamp to your feet. For by this means only you will escape shipwreck that you give all diligence to have greater fear of that God, who is the governor of all things, and who can cast 300 OLYMPIA MORATA. both soul and body iqto hell than of feeble mortals, whose life is in Scripture compared to a shadow, to grass, to a flower, and to a vapour. See that you do this with a firm and a great mind. All things, however severe, ought to be tolerable, if of short duration. " Here everything is in a state of warfare, and every where the saints are pressed down by many cares many have even fled to England, so much is the devil raging. But all these things ought to afford us much joy ; for we know that they por- tend that the happy and propitious day is at hand, when we shall together commence our ever blessed life. In the meantime we will devote ourselves to sacred studies. " I recommend to you my sister, with the most eager solicitude not that through you she may attain riches or worldly honours but that she may be thoroughly instructed in the knowledge of Christ. The form of this world will soon pass away. My husband and little brother desire to be remembered to you. Farewell in Christ. " Heidelberg, 30th August, 1554." HER WRITINGS. LETTER XII. " Olympia Morata to her Husband. " BLESSINGS on my dear husband. I desire of all things to know that you are well, what you are about, and what is doing with regard to our aftairs. I am extremely solicitous likewise to know what you have decided respecting your return, or send- ing for us to join you. On all these matters I entreat that you will write to me quickly and fully ; and that you will tell me the real truth, and not conceal anything with a view to my con- solation. For my desire is that if there should be any danger, (which God forbid,) I may instantly be with you ; and if you act otherwise, I shall consider you as doing me the greatest injury. But if you have nothing painful to communicate, (which I trust in God is the case,) see that you complete our business as speedily as time will permit. " But chiefly, my dear husband, amid these evils, I wish you to remember that we can have no firmer safeguard than God. Unite in prayer to Him, with other pious men. Nothing is so powerful as the prayer of the righteous. We have the example of Elias, who was ' a man of like 302 OLYMPIA MORATA. passions with ourselves ;' and, as James says, ' the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man avail- eth much.' Commend yourself therefore, and all of us, to God, and God will be present with you. Truly do I, who am thus consoling others, myself need consolation, for I am afflicted with much pain ; nor do I find any relief, save when I implore assistance from God ; and I exhort you all sedulously to do the same. Write I pray you when I may hope to see you, and take care that you do not attempt the journey unless the roads should be pronounced safe. " 10th February."* LETTER XIII. " Olympia Morata to her Husband. " I HAVE received your two letters, and it was very agreeable to me that you should think me at liberty to withdraw from hence ; which, that I may do without delay, I write this very day. For it seems certain that the prince will ere long re- turn, and renew hostilities with those who, trusting * The year in which this was written, and the cause of the ahsence to which it alludes, are unknown. HER WRITINGS. 303 in their supposed strength, prefer a continuance of the contest, to purchasing peace by a slight pecuniary sacrifice. " At all events, my dear husband, I entreat you again and again, that you will not leave me here. To some, it may appear a place of safety, but not so to me ; for I am satisfied that God is not on their side. Wherefore, as soon as possible, pre- pare for my returning with you, for it is idle to encounter what may lawfully be avoided ; and I would rather chuse to suffer the greatest priva- tions with the church of God, than lead this life, and abound in all things. Do not, I pray you, forget us ; and I beseech you by all means, re- move me from hence. Give thanks to God, whose bounty has hitherto protected us. Salute all. Our hosts send their good wishes." * LETTER XIV. " Olympia Morata to Michael Vebero a Student. " As we dearly love your mother, it is impossible for us not to rejoice in her gladness. We have The date and occasion of this letter are also uncertain. 304 OLYMPIA MORATA. therefore had great joy and delight from your let- ters addressed to my husband ; not only because they gave us proofs of your piety, but also from the testimony they bore to your proficiency in literature. Truly do we congratulate your mother that you are applying your mind to liberal pur- suits ; and not, as is too customary with young men, preferring youthful diversions to the cultiva- tion of philosophy. Believe me, it is a great gift conferred on you by God, if in this immoral age you are permitted to reap a rich harvest ; for, as He himself saith, those who are accepted of God, he will not suffer to be corrupted, even though they walk in the public way. Wherefore I once more rejoice with and congratulate you, and I earnestly hope that the good opinion which I have of you may daily be confirmed ; by which you will crown with joy the head of your mother, and render us, who are the most friendly of your friends, truly happy. And above all, I trust you will shew that you are not ungrateful to that God, who has endowed you with such happy natural dispositions. " I confess we feel no small solicitude lest these disastrous times should interrupt your auspicious career ; and nothing would more sincerely grieve HER WRITINGS. 305 and distress us. For it is at your age equally desirable to make farther progress, and to preserve steadily what you have already acquired. But even though deprived of your preceptors, you can always study, and command books; nor, indeed, should all things be inculcated solely by teachers, who are chiefly useful to point out what ought to be acquired. If you will be guided by my advice, you will read diligently whatever book you may think likely to be of use to you (for I am not aware of the precise nature of your studies) ; and when you have so done, turn it over again, and labour to make yourself master of it ; for it is better to know one thing well, than to know many superficially as Pliny the younger truly says. " By thus acting, you will relieve your mother from much solicitude respecting your secular stu- dies. But lest you should think I confine my en- couragement to common-place motives, let me, above all things, strongly exhort you to apply yourself with the whole force of your mind and soul to Holy Scripture ; which alone will teach you what is beautiful and disgraceful, what is useful and what frivolous will render you better, and sustain you by its intrinsic consolations under the greatest misfortunes. JJ06 OLYMPIA MORATA. " Be of good cheer. God will never desert even when suffering the most imminent perils those whom He is wont to defend and preserve ; for He saith, ' I will reign even in the midst of their enemies/ From the sacred fountain of Holy Writ, you may indeed imbibe many precious truths, in which you shall ever have our best as- sistance. My husband wishes you health and all good things ; and when at leisure, will himself answer you an office which I have for the pre- sent gladly taken on myself. Farewell." LETTER XV.* " Hieronymus Angenosius to the sweetest Olympia Morata. " MOST true, Olympia, is the old saying, that we are never fully aware of the value of anything, un- til we are deprived of it. Thus do I begin, now when absent, to appreciate the pleasure and enjoy- ment I had in your presence ; and the benefit I * This letter (the original of which is in Greek) from a French student, who seems to have been indebted to the clas- sical aids of Olympia is here introduced as a. pleasing proof of the gratitude excited by her interest in the improvement of youth. HER WRITINGS. 307 received from your conversation. The necessity which hurried me to France, has deprived me of your society, which I had hoped for some time longer to enjoy. I am recalled against my will into my native country, and am forced to leave that land in which I had so much enjoyment, and to which I had become so partial. But I feel especially bereaved, because my unexpected de- parture has deprived me of the advantage of your conversation ; for I was daily making progress in the Greek language, in which I could more easily converse with you, and I feel now much at a loss when I no longer have you to speak to on all manner of subjects. Should I have appeared faulty in having profited so seldom by these op- portunities, you must attribute it to diffidence; and though, now much dissatisfied with myself on account of it, it is a consolation, that in pro- portion to the distress I suffer from your absence, so much sweeter will be the recollection of you, and so much oftener shall I recall Morata to my* mind. Farewell. May you ever be happy, and bear to me the same affection with which I regard you." x 2 308 OLYMPIA MORATA. LETTER XVI. " Andreas Rosario to Olympia Morata, most famous for her piety and learning. " I BEG you will relieve me of my anxiety by writ- ing ; and as I now seldom mix in society, assist me in my studies by sending some of your literary works. Especially some of those Psalms, trans- lated into Greek verse, which work you had begun at Schweinfurt, and on-which, I hear with plea- sure, you are still employed. And I beg you will farther inform me whether your dear husband, and my valued friend, has set them to music."* * That this was probably the case, we may infer from an anecdote (occurring in a letter from Campano to Curio), so pleasing in itself, and honorable alike to the kindly feelings and musical talents of Olympia, that we gladly embrace the opportunity of quoting it here afforded. On the arrival of Olympia and her husband, after the dis- asters of Schweinfurt, at Furstenau, the residence of the Counts of Erbach, they were, by desire of their princely host, conducted by his officers to view the city. While visit- ing the boys' hospital, the master was engaged in giving them a lesson in music (probably psalmody), and the young no- vices, " not being perfect, sang out of tune." No sooner did Olympia discover their blushes and confusion, than she im- HER WRITINGS. 30d LETTER XVII. " John Sinapius to Otympia Morata. " After the destruction of our common country, we hoped that you would have come to us, and so that my Theodora would have had once more the advantage of your assistance, the absence of which has proved, during the whole period of the siege, an incalculable loss to her studies. But from what I have learned from my brother Conrad, Count Rhineck, illustrious no less for his piety than his rank, has afforded you timely aid, and the means of travelling ; and you have found at length a home at Heidelberg, whither you had been formerly invited. Who could have anticipated the rapid and fatal overthrow of our afflicted city ? Oh, unhappy fate of our country! Oh ! mise- rable exiles and expatriated citizens ! mediately stepped forward to the boys' assistance, sportively asking, in reply to their expressions of admiring surprise ' What, is it so wouderful that a woman should cheerfully join you in singing extempore V On being afterwards invited by the master, a man well- versed in literature, to his house ; he was there shewn some songs composed by Grundler, which tx- eited general admiration both of him and Olympia." 310 OLYMPIA MORATA. " But we will solace ourselves with the hope of another and truer country. For we know that this world to us is not a permanent residence, but as it were a temporary lodging-place; and that God will repay all these calamities with his richer blessings. From Italy I have received very recent letters, and some in which you are deeply con- cerned ; and I am ignorant whether you have heard lately of the state of the Court. They write that all there is full of perils and evils, and that God everywhere proves who are His, by the trial of the Cross. Considering the misfortune's of these his tried servants, we ought to bear ours meekly. All good things to you and your faith- ful husband, and give me information that your affairs are prospering, that I may congratulate you. " Wurtzburgh, 28th June, 1554."* * On which day one year is completed from the funeral of my beloved wife. Again farewell. This was the letter (already referred to) which induced Olympia to open her maternal arms to the daughter of her early friend and preceptor. 11 ER WRITINGS. 311 LETTER XVIII." " Olympia Morata to a certain German preacher, greeting. " I have very often greatly desired to have au opportunity of conversing with you, but this having been hitherto unattainable, I must resolve to per- form by letter what, had it been in my power, I should have preferred doing in person. But I must not longer delay executing the command of Christ, whom we are bound to be subject to and obey. " Having been informed, on too good author- ity, of your frequent transgressions, I have felt it my imperative duty to admonish you, as I wish to prove myself a true disciple of Christ. I therefore, hope, that (on due reflection) you will, on this ac- count, bear with me, if I remind you that when, regardless of the very great dignity of your minis- terial office, and unmindful of your grey hairs, you * This epistle, almost apostolic in its gravity and dignity df rebuke, though coming from a writer of five and twenty, seems to have been penned at the request of the delinquent's Hock, or family, and may serve to enhance our opinion, both of the influence and character of its author. 312 OLYMPIA MORATA. thus gratify your appetites, like another Epicurus, you fall into an error considered disgraceful by every man of education, and from which, many, not possessing the advantage of instruction in the Christian religion, preserve themselves guiltless. " But if such conduct is doubly reprehensible in a Christian, whose life ought to he holy, and his actions unimpeachable, and who is bound to al- lure others to the service of God, and to support true religion ; is it not most disgraceful in a preacher, not to walk himself in the path which he points out to others ? If it is shameful in a mere philosopher to fail in exhibiting in his own conduct the virtue he professes to recommend, can we style that pastor less than infamous, who, incul- cating purity on others, himself lives in shameless profligacy? Is it a slight offence in such to be perpetually drinking to become intoxicated to abuse the excellent gift of God which was given us to be used with grateful thanks, not turned into an occasion of licentiousness ? What evils does not drunkenness lead to ? profanation of the holy name of God (which they who take in vain we know will not be held guiltless) and pollution and debasement of those bodies which are the temples of the living God. They who indulge in such excesses, grieve the Holy Spirit, spurn and expel HER WRITINGS. 313 him from their breasts, deprive themselves of the benefit of his intercessions and if those who defiled the temple of Jerusalem were visited by God with such severe censures, what shall be their pu- nishment who pollute the templesof the Holy Ghost? " But not to dwell on those further aggravations by which the dignity of your ministerial office has been lessened, and Christ and his church disgraced, I cannot forbear remarking that thus to propagate immorality, instead of sound doctrine, is a species of theft in one, who having received a salary for communicating instruction, instead of setting before his disciples an example of modesty, so- briety, and temperance, plunges them by that very example in the depths of profligacy. For- get not, I beseech you, the saying of Christ ' Ye are the salt of the earth but if the salt hath lost its savour wherewith shall it be salted ? it is hence- forth good for nothing, but to be cast out and trodden under foot of men.' Think also upon the words of St. Paul ' But I command my own body, and keep it in subjection, lest, when I have preached to others, I myself should be a cast-away." " With what face could you desire your disciples to imitate you, as St. Paul commands his to take Him for their example ? Would you exhort them 314 OLYMPIA MORATA. to imitate you in drinking and in eating? In vain would you plead in excuse of this vice, the infirmity of the flesh. We all know that man is fallible, nor can any one be found who is guilt- less before God ; but those whose faith is genuine deny the passions and lusts of the flesh. The weakest are sometimes so strengthened as to ob- tain the mastery over their sins ; and truly drunk- enness is so disgraceful a vice, that even those who are ignorant of Christ can abstain from it. Shall we say that a Christian, notwithstanding the innumerable benefits conferred on him, cannot be a sober man, while the Turk, though perhaps a lost creature, and a profligate Mahometan, lives sparingly, soberly, and temperately not even tasting wine ? And if St. Paul thought it better that his flesh should suffer continual mortification, than that he should give pain to his brother, will you not even refrain from excess, which is so de- grading a crime ? and that, not lest one brother only should be afflicted or offended, but, lest a great multitude of your hearers should perish ? Far be it from us to extenuate this vice, for God will not judge it by our estimate of it, but by his own sentence ; and he places it in the number of the most flagitious crimes, which those who in- dulge in, ' cannot inherit the kingdom of heaven.' HER WRITINGS. 315 Wherefore I again and again, beg, entreat, and for the sake of Christ, beseech you, that you lay aside these habits, not only on account of your ministerial functions, but for your own safety, lest you should be of the number of those to whom it will be said in the last day, ' Depart from me, all ye that work iniquity.' God hath hitherto winked at you, and by his lenity, incited you to repentance. You are now on the verge of the grave repent I beseech you, that God may give you glory and honour on account of your reformation, in proportion as he formerly attached ignominy and disgrace to your profligate tenor of life. Think well, I pray you, of these things, and renounce them with your whole soul, lest God send you into punishment and you be lost for ever; for you know well that a profligate life argues the want of faith in Christ, without which you must altogether perish. " Wherefore I admonish and exhort you, before death seizes upon you, that you seek pardon from God that pardon which giveth repentance, and taketh away the sting of death. Believe me, that a sense of duty has dictated this remonstrance, which, if (as I hope) a Christian, you will take in good part, receive, and cheerfully improve. " Farewell in Christ." 316 OLYMPIA MORATA. LETTER XIX. " Olympia Morata to Madonna Cherubina Orsini. 11 MY dearest lady Cherubina. " To the letter I have already written you, I wish to add a few lines, for the purpose of ex- horting you to pray to God, that he would give you strength, lest, through fear of those that can kill the body only, you offend that gracious Redeemer who has suffered for our sakes ; and that He would enable you gratefully to confess him, according to his will, before this perverse generation, and ever to keep in remembrance the words of David, ' I hate the congregation of sinners, and will not sit in the company of the wicked.' " ' I am weak,' you will be apt to say, ' and cannot do this.' Oh ! do you imagine that so many saints and prophets, that so many martyrs, even in our day, have remained firm in their own unaided virtue, and that it was not God who gave them strength ? Then consider, that those whose weakness is mentioned in the Scriptures, did not continue always infirm ; St. Peter's denial of his HER WRITINGS. 317 master, is not recorded as an example for our imitation, but in order to display the great mercy of Christ, and to shew us our own frailty not to excuse it. He soon recovered from his weak- ness, and obtained such a degree of strength, that he afterwards rejoiced to suffer for the cause of Christ. " From these considerations, we should be induced when we are sensible of our infirmity, to apply by prayer, to the physician, and request he would make us strong. Provided we pray to Him, he will not fail to perform his promise ; only he does not wish us to be idle and unem- ployed, but to be continually exercising ourselves with that armour of which St. Paul speaks in the b'th Chapter of his Epistle to the Ephesians. We have a powerful enemy who is never at rest ; and Christ, by his example, has shewed us that he is to be overcome by prayer, and the word of God. For the love of Christ, then, who has redeemed you with his precious blood ! I entreat you to study diligently the Holy Scriptures, praying that the Lord would enable you to understand them. Mark how frequently, and with what ardour, the great prophet David prays, ' Lord, enlighten me, teach me thy ways, renew in me a clean heart;' 318 OLYMPIA MORATA. while we, as if we were already perfect, neither study nor read. Paul, that illustrious apostle, tells the Philippians, that he did not yet under- stand, but was still engaged in learning. We ought to he advancing from day to day, in the knowledge of the Lord, and praying all the time with the apostle, that our faith may be increased, and with David say, ' Hold up my steps in thy ways.' We have ourselves to blame for our weak- ness for we are continually excusing it, and neglecting the remedies which Christ has pre- scribed, viz. prayer and his word. Do you think that after having done and suffered so much from love to you, he will not fulfil the gracious pro- mise he has made, by granting your petitions for strength? Had he not intended to bestow it, he would not have invited you by so many pro- mises, to ask it ; and, lest you should entertain any doubts on this point, he has sworn that all you request of the Father, in his name, shall be given you. Nor does he say that he will give this or that thing, but every thing you solicit ; and St. John declares that he will bestow what- soever we ask, according to the will of God. Now is it not agreeable to his will that we desire of him faith and fortitude sufficient to enable us HER WRITINGS. 319 to confess him ? Ah ! how backward are we, and how ready to excuse ourselves ! " We must acquaint the physician with our disease, in order that he may cure us. Oh ! is it not the proper office of Christ to save us from our iniquities, and to overcome sin ? Knock, knock, and it shall be opened unto you. Never forget that he is omnipotent, and that before your hour is arrived, no one shall be able to touch a hair of your head ; for greater is he that is in us, than he that is in the world. Be not influenced by what the majority do, but by what the godly have done, and still do to this day. May the word of God be a lamp to your feet, for if you do not read and listen to it, you will fall before many stumbling blocks in this world. " I beg you to read this letter to Victoria, ex- horting her by precept and by example, to honour and confess God : and also along with Him the Holy Scriptures. Entreat my dear lady Laviqia to peruse frequently a portion of them ; and so she will experience the efficacy of the word of God. The Lord knows that I have written these exhortations with sincere concern for your salva- tion, and T beg of you to read them with the same feeling. I pray God that you may be enlightened 320 OLYMPIA MO R ATA. and fortified in Christ, so as to overcome Satan, the world, and the flesh, and to obtain that crown which is given to those only who over- come. I have no doubt that in following my advice, you will find the Lord strengthening you. Do not consider that it is a woman only who is giving you advice ; but rest assured that God, speaking by my mouth, kindly invites you to come to Him. " All false opinions, all errors, all disputes arise solely from not studying the Scriptures with sufficient care. David says, ' Thou hast made me wiser than all mine enemies, by thy law.' Do not listen to those who, despising the command- ments of God, and the means appointed for their salvation, say, ' If we be predestinated, we shall be saved, although we neither pray, nor study the Bible.' He who is called of God will not utter such blasphemy, but will strive to obey Him, and avoid tempting Him. The Lord has done us the honor and the benefit to speak to us to instruct and console us by his word, and should we despise such a valuable treasure ? He invites us to draw near to him in prayer; but we, neglecting the opportunity, and remaining inactive, are busied with disputes concerning the HER WRITINGS. 321 high counsels of God, and the things which are to come to pass. " Let us use the remedies He has prescribed, and thus prove ourselves to be obedient and predestinated children. Read and observe how highly God would have his word prized. ' Faith,' says Paul, ' comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.' Charity and faith, I assure you, would soon become cold were you to re- main idle. And it is not enough (as Christ him- self remarks) to have begun, we must persevere unto the end. ' Let him that standeth,' says Paul, ' take heed lest he fall.' I entreat you, for the love of Christ, not to confine yourself to the maxims of men, but to conduct yourself accord- ing to the word of God ; let it be a lamp to your feet, otherwise Satan will be able to deceive you in a variety of ways. Deliver these admonitions to my sister also. Never consider who the person may be that speaks to you but examine whether she speaks the word of God, or her own words ; and provided the Scriptures and not the authority of man be your guide, you will not fail to dis- cover the path of duty. Ask, seek, knock, and it will be opened unto you. Draw near to your heavenly Bridegroom, contemplating Him in the 322 OLYMPIA MORATA. Bible, that true and bright mirror, in which shines all the knowledge that is necessary for us. May God, for the sake of Christ, grant that I have not written in vain. The pain in my breast has been considerably encreased by the exertion, but I sincerely wish I were able, by my death, to assist you and others in the things which pertain to salvation. Do me the favor to send me a single line to acquaint me with the state of your health. 1555. " Your OLYMPIA." LETTER XX. " Celio Secundo Curio to Olympia Morata. " I HAVE received from you, my dearest adopted daughter, two letters, written and sent at dif- ferent times. What you desire me to do in the former, viz. that I should thank our booksellers for their liberality to you, I have taken care to perform in the best manner I could; and they have seen in the letters themselves, the spirit with which they are imbued, and the elegance and force with which you expressed your sentiments. HER WRITINGS. 323 " Your severe illness, was indeed to me matter of grievous lamentation. And as I myself was ill at the same time, and continued so for several days, it doubled my sufferings to know that your health was so indifferent. Nor was it sufficient that I had two evils to endure, for a third one has been added, which well nigh destroyed and overwhelmed me, weakened as I was by the pressure of the two first. My daughter Violanthe, who has been living with her husband at Stras- bourg, has been so dangerously ill, that for seven months her life was despaired of. But within these few days she appears to be some- what relieved ; and I trust, through the mercy of God, she may recover, even as I have re- gained my health. And if you also, the light of my soul, as well as the ornament of the age, are restored to me, I shall indeed have cause to rejoice ; the more so as by the letters which I received from you in July, by that good man Gallus, I learned, with exceeding sorrow, that the fever had not yet left you. " But all these things are a trial of our faith and piety, and, (as St. Paul says,) ' if we are here chastened of the Lord, it is lest we should be condemned with the world.' Let us strive then, v 2 324 OLYMPIA MORATA. and endure whatever befals us; certain that nothing can happen to us casually or by chance, but by Divine authority and that all things will work together for our good. I have saluted in your name, my wife and children, who love you dearly also Bernardo Ochino, that most learned and holy old man, and Herold, and many others ; especially that excellent man and lawyer Boniface Amerbach, to whom I much wish you would write. He is one of the many who have interested them- selves much in your favour : a man highly cele- brated for his humanity, his piety, his learning, and every virtue. Write to him therefore, for he admires and is delighted with your letters, all of which I communicate to him. " From the Frankfort fair you will receive some of my own little works, of which (should your illness allow you to read over attentively the fruit of my painful vigils,) I beg you will write me your opinion ; and request that your husband, whom I dearly love for his learning and piety, will do the same. Let me hear, I pray you, about your brother, if he is attentive to his studies, and is desirous of emulating his father, and yourself. Farewell, my dearest Olympia. Be careful of your health, that you may be HER WRITINGS. 325 longer spared as the ornament of our age. We are, indeed, envious of the city that possesses you. Send me whatever you have lately written, that we may enjoy the perusal, especially your poems. Again, farewell. May you live in our Lord Jesus Christ, to whose service you are dedicated. " Basle, Sept. 1555." LETTER XXI*. " Olympia Morata to Celio Secundo Curio. "Mr dearest Father Celio. " You may conceive how tenderly those who are united by true, that is, Christian friendship feel for one another, when I tell you that the perusal of your letter drew tears from my eyes ; for on learning that you had been rescued from * Curio received this letter by the same post which brought him intelligence of the death of the amiable writer. On look- ing over it, she perceived some mistakes, and insisted on tran- scribing it, but was obliged to desist, and said to her hus- band, with a smile which almost overcame him, "I see it will not do." N . B. This letter, and the preceding one to Cherubina, has been translated and published by Dr. M'Crie. 326 OLYMPIA MORATA. the jaws of the grave, I wept for joy. May God long preserve you to be a blessing to his Church ! It grieves me much to hear of the indisposition of your daughter; but I comfort myself with the hopes you entertain of her recovery. " As to myself, my dear Celio, I must inform you that there are now no hopes of my surviving long. No medicine gives me any relief. Every day, indeed every hour, my friends look for my dissolution. It is probable that this may be the last letter you will receive from me. My body and strength are wasted, my appetite is gone night and day, the cough threatens to suffocate me. The fever is strong and unremitting ; and the pains which I feel over the whole of my body, deprive me of sleep. Nothing therefore remains but that I breathe out my spirit. But so long as life continues, I will remember my friends, and the benefits I have received from them. " I return the warmest thanks to you for the books you have sent me, and to those worthy men who have bestowed upon me such valuable presents. Had I been spared, I would have shewn my gratitude. It is my opinion, that my departure is at hand. I commend the Church to HER WRITINGS. 327 your care; oh! let all you do be directed to its advantage ! " Farewell, excellent Celio. and do not distress yourself when you hear of my death ; for I know that I shall be victorious at the last, and am de- sirous to depart and be with Christ. My brother, about whom you enquire, is making proficiency in his studies ; though he needs the spur rather than the curb. Heidelberg seems deserted, on account of the numbers who have died of the plague, or fled for fear of it. My husband sends his compliments. Salute your family in my name. I send you such of the poems as I have been able to write out from memory, since the destruction of Schweinfurt. All my other writings have perished. I request that you will be my Aristarchus, and polish them. Again, farewell. Heidelberg, Oct. 1555." LETTER XXII. " Andrew Grundler wishes health to his Ccelius Secundus Curio. " IT hath pleased the Lord, my most accomplished friend, to fill up the measure of my former afflic- 328 OLYMPIA MOKATA. tions, from the ruin of my country, the plunder of my goods, and the loss of nearly all my friends and relatives, by at length depriving me of my beloved wife. While she was yet left to me, the loss of all other things appeared comparatively light ; but this calamity, like the huge tenth wave following all the others, has so entirely overwhelmed me, that I can find no possible alleviation to my grief. " She indeed departed with great eagerness, and if I may so speak, with a certain pleasure in dying, arising from her firm persuasion that she was called away from daily affliction, and from a world of suffering, to eternal happiness. But alas ! I cannot yet derive consolation even from the re- membrance of the pleasing and happy life we passed together. We were united not quite five years ; but never hSve I known a soul so bright and pure, or a disposition so amiable and up- right. " Shall I also mention her singular piety and learning ? To you who knew her so well, it were indeed superfluous to praise her, and as it would ill become me to extol what was in truth a part of myself, I leave to others (and especially to men of learning and cultivation like yourself) the pleasing task ; nor do I doubt that some congenial spirit HER WRITINGS. 329 will grace her obsequies with an appropriate tribute. To this I will also add ray tears, when grief will allow me ; for there is a kind of sorrow like mine, (and it is the greatest of any) in which tears cannot even be shed ; but when the mind, wearied and spent by an accumulation of disastrous circumstances, is so struck down by some final blow, as to be absolutely stupified. In this state I at present am, unable for any exertion. Yet since I am sure it will afford you satisfaction, I will try (though in truth I am scarcely able) to tell you briefly how she died. " A short time before her death, on awaking from a tranquil sleep into which she had fallen, I observed her smiling very sweetly ; and I went near and asked her whence that heavenly smile proceeded. ' I beheld,' said she, ' just now while lying quiet, a place filled with the clearest and brightest light.' Weakness prevented her saying more. 'Come,' said I, 'be of good cheer, my dearest wife, you are about to dwell in that beau- tiful light.' She again smiled and nodded to me, and in a little while said ' I am all gladness,' nor did she again speak, till her eyes becoming dim, she said, ' I can scarcely know you, but all places appear to me to be full of the fairest flowers.' 330 OLYMPIA MORATA. Not long after, as if fallen into a sweet slumber, she expired. " She had often for several days before, affirmed with great assurance that there was nothing she so greatly desired as to die and be with Christ, whose very great benefits towards her she, as often as her disease permitted, never ceased to proclaim ; because he had enlightened her with a knowledge of his word, and had alienated her mind from all the pleasures of this world, and had kindled in her a desire of eternal life ; nor did she hesitate to call herself a daughter of God. It afforded her little satisfaction when any one with a view to her con- solation, expressed a hope that she might recover from her illness ; ' for God/ she said, ' had set bounds to the short course of her life, a course which was full of labour and sorrow, and she was far from wishing to be brought back from the end of her race to its beginning.' Being asked by a pious man whether her mind was oppressed by any doubts or anxieties, she replied, ' that indeed for seven years previous, Satan had never ceased his efforts to draw her from the faith, but now, as if he had lost his weapons^ he never made his appearance ; nor,' added she, ' do I now ex- perience any other sensation than the greatest tran- HER WRITINGS. 331 quillity and peace with . Christ.' But it would be endless were I to enumerate all the things that ex- cited the admiration of us who heard her, and the piety, holiness, and fortitude with which she spoke. She died on the 25th of October, at four o'clock in the afternoon, not having yet reached her 29th year. " She had received a letter from you at the last Frankfort fair, which, although then a sad suf- ferer, she wished to have answered with her own hand. But being unable, from sickness, to com- plete it, she consigned the task to me. I there- fore transmit you this sad token of impending dissolution, along with some psalms and a few other poems. On my reminding her of Amer- bachius, another valued correspondent, she said, ' I have nothing to say, and even if I had, I am unable to communicate it. But do you, when you write to our Ccelius, order him in my name, to be well.' " Her brother is still with me, though I fear that from my necessary absence from him, he is making little proficiency ; especially as, our schools being at present deserted, there are no other scholars to excite him to emulation. If you thought he could derive more benefit with you, I 332 OLYMPIA MORATA. would willingly assist in this to the extent of my power ; being very desirous that he should emu- late the renown of the sister who educated him thus far herself. In this matter I shall anxiously expect your advice. "lam much perplexed as to the manner in which I should convey this intelligence to my mother-in-law ; as I know that the excellent lady, who has had so large a share of other afflictions, will be much distressed by it. The only plan that suggests itself, is to entreat you, with that piety and eloquence for which you are so distinguished, to prepare the way for my letter, and strengthen her mind before-hand for this dreadful blow. It is with reluctance that I lay the burden upon you, but I know not what I should do, and have no other friend to whom I can apply. If ever it is in my power, in any way, to repay the obligation, believe me, and I speak _in all sincerity, I will cheerfully and cordially do so. I have not yet read your books, as I have never been able, during the period of my dearest wife's illness, to direct my attention to any other object. But as soon as I am in a state to do any thing, I will read them carefully, especially those on the Kingdom of God ; since I may hope to derive from them a remedy HER WRITINGS. to ray disease. In the mean time, farewell, dear Coelius, you who are happier than myself in a be- loved wife and sweet children. " Heidelberg, Nov. 23d, 1555." LETTER XXIII. " Coelio Secundo Curio to Lucretia Morata, greeting. " Although, Lucretia dear to me as a sister I have not often written to you, it has not pro- ceeded from any forgetfulness on my part of your kindness towards me, but from the unfavourableness of the times ; for I well recollect how attentive you were to me when, during the life of your husband Fulvio, I was under your roof. Indeed, on account of this your friendship, I heard, though absent, with great joy of your prosperity ; and have been much grieved to learn your subsequent misfortunes. When, after the death of my beloved Fulvio, I heard of the marriage of your Oly mpia with a very learned young physician it gave me the greatest pleasure to find that a most excellent and accomplished young lady had, by divine providence, met with a suitable partner. And when after having been 334 OLYMPIA MORATA. carried into Germany by her husband, she who had always shared the faithful friendship felt for me by her father Fulvio, requested me by letter to renew it with her, I gladly acceded, thinking those friendships neither true nor firm which do not descend to one's heirs, and thus become eter- nal. So that we both persevered in the same sen- timents, since she wrote to me as to her father, and I to her as to my dear daughter, as our letters on both sides testify. " But on the disasters which befel their flourish- ing city of Schweinfurt, having come to my know- ledge, I felt greatly apprehensive lest she and your son Emilius should have fallen victims to the disease which prevailed in the country of her hus- band. For although whoever has witnessed dis- solution in any shape, must ever feel that death is death, yet does the mind particularly recoil from those forms of it which violently snap the chord of life by the instrumentality of some ex- ternal force, except in that one instance when it happens to us to die for the sake of our holiest religion and virtue. This kind of death I esteem the most happy, save when any one quietly and peacefully departs from this life surrounded by friends ; for I think this (the actual pang excepted) HER WRITINGS. 33 not a death, but a sweet departure, and a most safe entrance to another life. " I can easily imagine that when Olympia, with her little brother and husband, took leave of you to undertake a long and difficult journey, and reside in a far distant land her departure, when you could scarce hope to see her again in this life, was viewed by you almost in the light of her death ; nor do I doubt that upon learning the cruel and miserable ruin of your son-in-law and his country, you must have long-lamented them as dead. And thence I can easily comprehend that should one of them indeed be called from a life full of miseries and calamities to that better life above, you could not experience greater griefs than you have un- dergone for their sakes. Let us speak the truth, my sister Lucretia what is there stedfast and firm in this wilderness world, and what is chiefly to be regarded by a Christian mind ? For none of those things which are chiefly admired among men, move me wealth, dignities, or pleasures; but I desire to depart and be with Christ my pre- server in that eternal and blessed life. And such I assure you was the desire of your Olympia, as she has often told me, and as her husband's letters to me testify. 336 OLYMPIA MORATA. " At length God has granted her wish, and she has peacefully departed to heaven, not only from your arms as a ripened fruit plucked from the tree, but also from the arms of her beloved husband, and from the bonds of the flesh, to enjoy those true blessings which always formed the chief sub- ject of her hopes and desires. I will confess that if we regard only ourselves, she is much to be lamented ; but if we consider her advantages and felicity, and the miseries of this life, we may con- sole ourselves, and rejoice for her ; and it is the part of an egotist, not of a friend, to be heavily grieved for what only inconveniences himself. " Let us consider the thing a little more deeply. Olympia is not dead, but she lives with Christ, blessed and immortal ; and after many griefs and toils she is received into sweet and wished-for rest. I say Olympia lives ! she lives even in this world, and will live while there are men on the globe, in the immortal memory of her works, those divine monuments, and in the remembrance of all ex- cellent minds. For that which is confined to body and sensation is not the only life ; there is a brighter existence which shall flourish through all ages, which posterity shall augment, and which eternity itself shall not diminish. HER WRITINGS. 337 " Since these things are so, you, ray Lucretia, who are gifted with prudence, faith, and piety, ought to submit your will to that of God, who has imposed upon all the payment of the debt of nature, and to the just and holy desire of Olympia herself, through whose means you and all your friends and our dear Italy will ever be famed. The applause of all shall celebrate her learning, piety, faith, and charity. " Think and reflect on these things ; and so shall you be enabled to place such a just limit to your grief, that even a daughter's memory may not claim more tears than a pious and religious spirit authorises. Farewell. " Basle, 1st January, 1556." LETTER XXIV. " Celio Secundo Curio to Andrew Grundler. " IT is impossible for me to express in words, or in any other manner, how much I am grieved at the intelligence contained in your letter. You have communicated to me the death of one whom, not only on account of the memory of her excel- lent and learned father, I dearly loved, but whom I also highly valued for her eminent piety towards OLYMPIA MORATA. God, and superior learning. And although I know well how fondly you were attached to her, and even to her memory, and how deeply you suffer from her death yet at least you will allow me to say that in love of a different kind I am not inferior to you. You mourn for our dearest Olympia as a wife, I as a daughter; and that not merely on account of the excellence of her disposition, but because of her admirable profi- ciency in piety and Christian charity. " Notwithstanding the cheerfulness of mind and confidence in God with which she departed this life, yet so greatly was it to our loss and sor- row, that it is natural, nay fitting, for us to lament her. But let one so gentle be lamented rather with tenderness than with selfish sorrow ; so that as often as we recall the memory of her Christian virtues, we may manifest our affection for her and not ourselves. And in deploring the loss of her society an evil exclusively our own let us avoid by our moderation the imputation of mere selfish regret for her rare domestic qualities. If we, who according to our Christian profession, know how little they are sufferers, who, like her, quit this life in the faith of Christ, and in cheer- fulness of mind grieve as if something cala- HER WRITINGS. 339 mitous had happened to her we certainly do not estimate with sufficiently grateful hearts the extent of her present happiness. I have found no medicine more efficacious than this, in allevi- ating my own deep distress ; nor do I doubt that even that of a husband may be mitigated by such salutary considerations. I have written, as you desired, to your mother-in-law, and have given her all the consolation I could, with what pro- priety you will judge, as I herewith transmit you the letter, translated from Italian into Latin for your perusal. " I have determined to publish, as soon as pos- sible, such works of our Olympia as are in my possession, along with the opinions and praises of her, written by so many learned men. I have myself composed, not an epitaph, but an apothe- osis of her in a few verses ; and I will add to her own letters, mine, and those written by you con- cerning her death, which will jointly, on the best authorities, supply the record of her life. I there- fore entreat you to send me, as soon as possible, whatever writings of hers you already possess, or can recover from others, that they may be added to the rest. " I have thought much of what you wrote to z 2 340 OLYMPIA MORATA. me concerning Emilius, your wife's brother; and it occurs to me that your University, if not already restored and renovated, will, in all probability, soon be so especially as you have a new prince who is much devoted to literature. But if this has not taken place, or does not promise shortly to do so, I entreat, nay, I insist, that you will send him to me, to remain till he is grown up. Do not fail, therefore, to write to me, and inform me what are your hopes and prospects ; and it will be a satis- faction to me to learn, in your next letter, that you do not disapprove what I have written con- cerning our Olympia. Whether we may ever meet on earth, I know not, but ardently do I de- sire it ; for in seeing you face to face, I should not see yourself only, but also my dearest Olym- pia. My wife salutes you, and my little Fulvius Emilius. Farewell. " Basle, March, 1556." LETTER XXV. " Chilian Sinapius to Cello Secundo Curio. " ALTHOUGH your letter, which I received some months ago, most learned man, was very gratify- ing to my feelings, yet I have not hitherto replied HER WRITINGS. 341 to it, because I could not comply with your just request so satisfactorily as I wished. For the writings of Olympia Morata, though left with me, had been dispersed, and partly lent to friends, and I was prevented from collecting and trans- mitting them to you sooner by my constant avo- cations and the serious indisposition of my wife. But I trust that my excuses have already been amply and truly laid before you by that learned and elegant young man, Basil, son of Boniface Amerbachius, who, on your recommendation, was much in our house. Be assured that your recol- lection of me after so long a period was most gra- tifying and pleasant to me, seeing that it is full twenty years since we met at the court of Ferrara. " With regard to Olympia, that admirable and accomplished woman of whom you have written to me, my testimony may be comprised in a few words. For however highly I ventured to prog- nosticate concerning her, has she not far more than confirmed my expectations by her piety, her erudition, and her sweetness of manners ? while the high excellence she had attained in languages, and in the knowledge of the sacred Scriptures, her writings, as well as the letters which you have published, sufficiently point out and prove. I 342 OLYMPIA MORATA. envy you and Italy such an ornament ; and wish that this honour to the female sex throughout the world, had been born in Germany where she died. But I am aware that you do not conceal her having been educated as much by German teach- ers as by those of her own country ; and, indeed, so much was she indebted to mute teachers, viz : books, that she might be almost considered self- taught. I send you some trifling lines of my composition, more for the purpose of expressing my heartfelt regard for her than that I think them worthy of their subject being rude and unpolished. But you well know that employ- ment in the courts of law for upwards of ten years is not favourable to the cultivation of poetry, therefore let my good intentions compensate for the defects in the execution. Farewell. " Spires, August, 1560." LETTER XXVI. " Celio Secundo Curio to Chilian Sinapius. " A TARDY answer, when occasioned by no neg- ligence or contempt, but merely by necessary avocations, can never deserve reprehension. -And well aware as I am of your great press of business HER WRITINGS. 343 regarding the Empire, you need not have feared that I, who am not unacquainted with such affairs, should have hesitated to accept the apo- logy; especially from you, whom I have ever known to be the most courteous as well as diligent of men. The excuse was duly made long since by that accomplished young man Basil, who, in his letters, faithfully reported your weighty avoca- tions ; and therefore not only is the most polite Chilian perfectly absolved in my eyes, but I myself am rather to be blamed, who have troubled a man, vexed with such multifarious and important con- cerns, with comparatively trifling affairs. " This, however, you will attribute to my love for that extraordinary woman, your testimony regarding whom is, though late, so agreeable and acceptable ; and to my anxiety for her fame, with which I am greatly excited, and which you also say in your letter you envy us, lest some part of her praises should not redound to the credit of her German teachers, by whom, and not by Italians alone, she was instructed. Truly we acknowledge, most learned Chilian, that when she was at the court of the Duke of Ferrara, she, along with the princess, was under the tuition of yourself and your brother. But previously, however, her father 344 OLYMPIA MOBATA. Fulvius had brought her to the princess, highly instructed for her time of life ; and you are not ignorant that he continued along with yourself to instruct and exercise her. In one respect, how- ever, the Germans must ever have the advantage over the Italians, because not only did they engross her latest thoughts, but also amongst them this most accomplished woman deposited her chaste body while from that country also she soared to heaven, and rendered to God, and the Lord Jesus Christ, that spirit which she first drew in Italy. It is on these grounds that I have requested from you her latest works ; and have also troubled you with a letter for your brother, which I entreat you to forward as soon as possible. The relics you have already sent me are most valuable and pleasing. If you can recover any more, I ear- nestly entreat you so to do ; and I also beg of you that whatever I have done, or may do, you will, on no account, allow your recollection of me to be interrupted or obliterated. Farewell. " Basle, September, 1560." HER WRITINGS. 345 LETTER XXVII. " Celio Secundo Curio to John Sinapius. " SINCE we have published all the remains which we could collect of our Olympia, and as they have been received by all with open arms, like sacred shields fallen down from heaven it occurs to me, most excellent and friendly Sinapius, that it would be to the increase of her fame, to publish a a new and more elegant edition of her works. Towards effecting this, I have written to Spires, to your honoured brother, that whatever he might possess might be inserted in the edition. He has sent me all he could collect, along with some Epitaphs upon Olympia, and has advised me to write to you, who without doubt have many frag- ments, and those very valuable. I entreat you, therefore, by the manes of Olympia, and by our friendship, confirmed by so many years' stand- ing, that you hasten to send to me as soon as possible, whatever relics you possess, by which the fame and praise of your pupil may be farther illustrated. In so doing you will not only pro- pitiate by posthumous kindness, the spirit of that divine woman, but will perform a most gratify- 346 OLYMPIA MORATA. ing and delightful service to the many learned scholars, who admire her writings. Farewell, excellent friend. " Basle, Sept. 1560." LETTER XXVIII. " Chilian Sinapius to Celio Secundo Curio, " I DO not doubt, most excellent and learned Curio, that my long protracted silence must have produced in your mind a suspicion that I have been hitherto but little mindful either of our Olympia, or of your friendship. On both these points I could amply justify myself, as you have already been informed by our mutual friend Basil of my numerous avocations and constant employment. " It would be now almost superfluous to refer to the death of my dearest brother, did I not wish you to know that in addition to the bitter grief it occasioned, there devolved upon me the guardianship of his only daughter, and the chief management of his affairs ; of which, indeed, I am now in a great measure relieved, by her late marriage with Don Christopher Elephantus, one of the emperor's privy council. HER WRITINGS. 347 " I have at no time however, neglected, on any favourable opportunity, to enquire diligently in the library of my brother, if there were any of Olym- pia's writings left there. Of those which have been found and transmitted to me from Wirtem- burg, I have made copies, and now send them by the bearer, to compensate for my delay by diligence and abundance. I have been, informed that the inhabitants of Heidelberg have also been busily employed in seeking after the remains of Olympia, for the same purpose ; but not with the same right or ability as yourself. " Spires, May, 1562." 348 OLYMPIA MORATA. DIALOGUE BY OLYMPIA MORATA, INSCRIBED TO THE PRINCESS LAVINIA ORSINI.* Theophila and Philotima converse together. THE. Human life is so constantly exposed to the various shafts of the evil one, that with what- ever subject our thoughts are occupied, it gene- rally proves fertile in vexation, especially to the pious ; who suffer not only from their own dis- tresses, but from participation in those of others. As for myself, though, alas ! sufficiently weighed down by my own miseries, I experience additional suffering from those of the dear friend, whom duty and affection alike urge me to endeavour to console. PHI. I think I hear the voice of our The- * This Dialogue is alluded to in the correspondence, as having been written to reconcile the mind of the princess to certain domestic sources of irritation. HER WRITINGS. 349 ophila ! If so, you have indeed come at a mor ment when you were much wished for ; since I am almost beside myself with a vexation which your presence and conversation may perhaps as- suage. Let us sit down, that we may be able to converse more conveniently. It were needless for me, I am sure, to impart to you the cause of my uneasiness, as in every emergency I have always reposed more confidence in you, than in any other female friend, and have never had any secrets from you. But, alas ! it is well-known to many besides yourself, how much I have been annoyed by the repeated ab- sences of my husband, under which I am again a sufferer. Once more has he gone away, and de- serted me without a cause ; and while he is en- joying himself, I am left a prey to unhappiness from this and other causes. There was nothing which, when a girl, I more earnestly desired than to meet with a husband of congenial disposition and manners, whose society I might always enjoy ; nor could this life, I be- lieved, afford greater felicity than such an attach- ment to such an object. But, alas ! how dif- ferent has the event proved, and how cruelly does the disappointment enhance my unhappiness ! 350 OLYMPIA MORATA. THEO. If, as I am persuaded, to admonish, and to receive admonition, are essential branches of a true and Christian friendship the former freely and without asperity, and the latter pati- ently and in the spirit of meekness I shall but prove how dear you are to me by the boldness of my affectionate reproof. PHI. Pray speak frankly and unreservedly ; for I am aware that we ought to admonish each other, and that whatever you say will be just and impartial. Never for a moment suppose I can take it amiss. THEO. First then, my dear friend, if, as is the duty of us all, you had diligently studied the books of the Old and New Testament you would have derived from these sources a new light on human affairs, and would have learned that all things are ordained very differently from our ideas ; for it is there said, " A man's heart deviseth his way, but it is God that directeth his steps." You would have learned to repose trust in God, and confide all things to Him. The example of the saints would have taught you that the worst of evils may be overcome. You would have ceased to imagine that marriage would exempt you from every vex- ation ; for you would have read of many evils HER WRITINGS. 351 which had assailed holy women who had married, not with your selfish views of personal enjoyment, but that they might serve God in that state of life ; conducting themselves towards their husband and towards their children, as those whom God had committed to their charge educating them in piety and holiness, and instructing them in the religion of Christ and divine knowledge. There- fore it is not wonderful that all things have not turned out prosperously for you, more especially, as God was not the end you proposed to yourself to whom belong all things, and for whom all things were made. In fine, if you had duly re- flected upon this matter, you would have con- sidered how great (even in those most pre-eminent for goodness) has ever been the preponderance of their sins and their ingratitude ; and that to these, the utmost trials to which we can be subjected in this life, bear no greater proportion than a slight chastisement inflicted by a father, on a profligate son, guilty of innumerable crimes. With what right can you complain so bitterly of the anxieties arising from the untoward features of your lot, when, during the long course of your preceding life, you have despised God and his Holy Word, preferring every thing else to Him ? When you 352 OLYMPIA MORATA. have neglected your own salvation, and that of those committed to your charge, when you have leaned on your own strength, and gloried in your own riches, and placed greater dependence on the power of your friends, than on God ? Nor have you ever given him adequate thanks for the many and great benefits he has bestowed on you. And what need I say more ? Read the Decalogue, with the annexed explanation, and you will see, as in a glass, how deeply you are involved in a variety of sins. PHI. As regards God, I cannot deny that my punishment, so far from exceeding my transgres- sions, seems as nothing when compared to them ; but then I see many others in happier circum- stances than myself, who certainly are not fault- less, nay, who live more blameably than I do. THEO. I perceive you think those women happy, who indulge in a greater liberty and licen- tiousness of life ; who pass their time in idleness, indulge in splendid attire, ride about in gilded carriages (as is the custom in Ferrara, and other cities of Italy, where they dress, not to please their husbands, but to please others), which women, if they do not repent, God will punish as they de- serve. Do you think these happy, or do you wish to imitate them ? HER WRITINGS. 353 PHI. Truly I should be very sorry to imitate them, in as far as they seek, by adorning themselves, to be admired by other men ; for as you well know, it has always been my highest ambition to be beloved by my husband, and by him alone. But I own it vexes me that such women should enjoy in abundance things which are denied to me, and in which I, descended from so illustrious a family, ought to abound. Far be it from me to desire to enjoy any improper degree of liberty, but I should sometimes wish to go abroad for the pleasure of meeting acquaintances, to have carriages and horses suited to my rank, to have elegantly orna- mented furniture and rich tapestry, and a deli- cately served table to be permitted to invite my female friends to an occasional enter- tainment, and above all, to have abundance of ready money to enable me to give largely to others. THE. While you have been making this enumeration, I have been thinking of my own follies ; for I also was once entangled in the same mire, and must still have so remained, had not God of his great mercy extricated me. What, let me ask, should you say of the folly and ab- surdity of a woman, drest in fine garments A A 354 OLYMPIA MORATA. and glittering with gold and jewels, while her face at the same time was covered with dirt ? PHI. I should say it did not indicate folly merely, but madness ! THE. And deservedly ! because the part thus neglected, was the one which ought to have com- manded her chief attention. Are we then less insane, when we permit the soul, which is the most precious and divine gift of God, to be defiled with all sorts of crimes, far more offensive in his sight than bodily defilement in ours ? when we are studiously careful to adorn that body which is the soul's poison, while we neglect the immortal in- mate? when we earnestly desire to traverse lux- uriously in chariots the petty circle of human life, yet have no stedfast confidence in that chariot by whose aid we must perform the more arduous journey to heaven ? when we wish to live in spa- cious and splendid palaces, but have no longing anticipation for those eternal habitations which transcend them far in splendour and magnificence, and which God has designed for our perma- nent residence, while the others are only lent for our temporary lodging ? when we pine after lux- uriously furnished tables, but have no relish for that word of God which alone yields the sweetest HER WRITINGS. 355 food ? Truly the perversity of human nature is in- credible, since you cannot pronounce at once on the felicity of those who place their happiness in such things, and say whether it exceeds your own ! PHI. Nay, I am persuaded it is as you say of these women, provided they are destitute of heavenly gifts ; but there have been females who were holy and religious, and at the same time enjoyed temporal advantages who possessed beauty and riches, and were called by God to the highest degree of worldly honour. For instance, did not a great King take Esther in marriage? and was not Abigail united to King David ? Yet both cultivated piety, while they flourished in wealth and honour. THE. God bestows special gifts on some, and imposes special burdens on others; and it does not belong to us to reflect upon his arrange- ments ; but we know that he does nothing unad- visedly, and that all things are designed for our advantage. Were it for our benefit, you may rest satisfied that He who has already given himself, that greatest and best gift, would bestow largely and abundantly those earthly distinctions you covet. Unless, therefore, you are fully persuaded that those things, however little injurious to others, 356 OLYMPIA MORATA. would prove so to you, you will be always han- kering after them, and undervaluing those admi- rably suited to your character, which God has seen fit to impart. For my part, the very anxiety you testify to possess these luxuries, convinces me that you would be apt to enjoy them at the expence of your immortal interests, nay, perhaps end by giving them the decided preference. Now, with regard to Queen Esther, the case appears to have been quite different, since she appeals in her prayer to Him before whom we must not lie, that she had not sought the honours of royalty, but on the contrary, was averse to that eminent station ; as indeed the whole course of her life testified since neither riches, nor honours, nor the love of the King, could alienate her from God ; nay, it is certain that she exposed herself to the danger of death for the sake of her people and their welfare. By her means, the very day which the King, at the suggestion of the wicked Haman, had appointed for the destruction of the Jews, became, from the most melancholy, one of the most brilliant in their annals. Mordecai, anxious for his own safety and that of his people, came to the Queen, earnestly imploring her to save them. Now this could only be done by soothing HER WRITINGS. 357 with entreaties that monarch, into whose presence to come uncalled, was certain death; and this danger did the Queen brave for her people, by going to the King. And can we doubt that the possession of these kindly and generous sentiments contributed materially to her happiness, especially when living at a court, in the midst of the irre- ligious and estranged from the people of God ? By persons of this unambitious frame of mind, riches and distinctions may be possessed without proving injurious, while they prove the destruction of others, whose hearts are set on them. For in- stance, Queen Vashti, whom good fortune had so intoxicated, that she insolently refused to obey her husband, the great King Ahasuerus. Thus prosperity invigorates the minds of the wise, while those of the impious are idly puffed up by it. God either entirely withholds external advantages from his people lest they should perish, or if he sees fit to give them, they are tempered with the alloy of much grief. Had Esther's not been balanced by such severe anxieties, it is probable they would have affected her as perniciously as they do many others, and in all probability they would have caused her to forget her God ; for she was flesh, and as we read concerning the people of 358 OLYMPIA MORATA. Israel * my beloved hath waxed fat, and hath kicked/ With regard to Abigail, if David was reduced to great privations when she assisted him, we must consider her as having also much to endure. You forget, when looking at the outward splendour of her lot, to consider the painful anxiety in which her life had been spent, in short, as often as you think of your own distresses, you place before your eyes only those persons, who, in reality or in ap- pearance at least, have been fortunate. This you ought not to do, but rather to keep in view those who in this life have been miserable, afflicted, and wretched, of whom there are so great a number, not to mention Christ the true Son of Almighty God, who suffered greater and more severe afflic- tions than any other person in the memory of man. Read too the histories of the saints, and consider if they have not been exposed to far greater calamities than we, notwithstanding their infinite superiority above us. I might also bring before you many living ex- amples, but I will content myself with one a lady of the most elevated rank, and her celebrated husband the Elector of Saxony. What do you think must have been the extent of their distress, HER WRITINGS. 359 when they were separated from each other ? Their love equalled yours ; and he was not, like your husband, in the enjoyment of the highest offi- ces ; but he was absent, a captive deprived of every comfort stripped of all his distinctions, from his high estate despised in the fallen power of his enemies ; yet such was his piety and goodness, that (at least among princes,) I know not if the world could furnish a similar example ; and such was his fortitude, that no word of despair ever passed his lips, as a Spaniard, a favorite of the emperor's, particularly mentions in his letters. The calamity of these illustrious persons (if calamity it can be called, for I prefer their prison and their ignominy, to all the victories and tri- umphs of others,) may well rebuke yours : for can there be greater misery than to hear of those whom we love and hold dear, suffering distress; especially those who were once princes and favorites of fortune, enjoying honors, wealth, respect, and above all, friends, and now cast down and abandoned? And what shall I say of others, who are daily, as you know, for the sake of Christ, suffering injuries, ignominy and exile, and are slain and 360 OLYMPIA MORATA. burned ? Reflect on these things, and you will be convinced that you are not so miserable as you think ; nay, that you are a very happy person, in so far that you are treated by God as a daughter : for " whom he loveth he chasteneth." And what greater felicity can there be than to be a child of God, to enjoy eternal blessedness with Christ, and to be a partaker of his king- dom ? PHI. You preach admirably ! but I am so weak- minded that my burden still appears grievous, and I feel some remaining desire for the indul- gences I have already mentioned. From this I am really desirous if possible, to be relieved, but cannot see how it is to be accomplished. THE. Nor will your suffering be diminished till you are able to correct what is its real cause. I can give you no better advice than that, if you are unable of yourself patiently to bear adversity, you should apply to Him who calls to all that are " weary and heavy laden," to " come to him" and be born anew. He cannot lie ; he Himself will establish you, and will give you the Holy Spirit, as he promised, by whom you will be enabled to taste all those celestial benefits, which will not only mitigate, but finally quench your earthly HER WRITINGS. 361 desires, for whosoever drinks of these, shall " never thirst again." Thus, supported by the hope of the good things which, though you cannot see them, are eternal, and far more certain than the frail and fleeting visible things of earth you will easily alleviate the trifling inconveniences of this life by weighing them with the advantages of another. PHI. These may seem trifling to you but were you in my situation, you would think otherwise. THE. I have abstained from speaking of myself, though I might appeal to our mutual acquaintance whether I have not had my full share of trials. But I may refer you to any pious person, whether in these times, if any one seriously wishes to seek and promote the service of God the devil will allow him to lead a quiet and peace- able life ; nay, whether he does not do every thing in his power to destroy him entirely and forever? If he does not succeed in one way, he assails in another now affecting with dis- ease, or with ignominy now reducing to poverty again inducing hatred even from those who are most dear to us and at another time sowing dissension between those who ought to be most 362 OLYMPIA MORATA. attached to each other often producing (as I can well testify) such distress and torment of mind as is far more grievous than the tortures of the executioner. In short, who cannot enumerate the evils, the sufferings, and dangers, which the pious have to undergo ? There is no one whose sole object is to live piously in Christ, who does not endure the bitterest pains, and miseries, and daily bear his cross, while you only brood upon your own little distresses. PHI. It is natural for us to feel much more acutely the vicissitudes of our own lot than we can possibly do those of others, and consequently the same things viewed from a distance, appear very differently. My burden still presses heavily on me, and I should be glad that if possible it could be removed ; but if this cannot be accom- plished, I would certainly rather chuse to suffer the miseries of this life, and to possess the king- dom of Christ, than to suffer eternal punishment in the life that is to come. THE. In this you judge wisely! For even great sufferings ought to be supportable if they are of short duration, and what is shorter than this life ? How many princes and eminent men have perished in our time, whose very names have HER WRITINGS. 363 been buried in the same tomb which covers their bodies, so that they are as if they had never existed ! so true is that hackneyed saying " Man is a bubble ;" and Peter says that the shortness of this life is " like unto a vapour." Should not then the long period of Time make a far deeper impression on us than one so brief ? and should we not be now thinking of the life that lasts for ever, and not of that which is but for a moment? Never :an you find true happiness on earth none of the things you so much desire will yield you any enjoyment, except in God. Death is inevitable and daily threatens from the short- ness of life it cannot be far distant ; all things are flowing and passing away, nor do they ever remain stationary for any length of time. PHI. You speak truly, and I feel inclined to take your advice. I desire to seek God, from whom all good things flow, as my chiefest good and supreme happiness. But I feel apprehensive, lest my approach to him should be prevented by the greatness of my sins, for just now you said sin was highly offensive to Him. THE. Lay aside your fears; for as you have known the most disagreeable odour to be thoroughly dispelled and overcome by the pre- 364 OLYMPIA MORATA. sence of a sufficient quantity of perfumes so there is no effluvia, however corrupt and offen- sive, arising from sin, which cannot be conquered and dissipated by the " sweet-smelling savour" which flows from the death of Christ, and which is the only incense acceptable to God. Seek therefore after Christ, and doubt not you will find him in the books of the Old and New Testa- ment, for he cannot be found elsewhere. Pray to him, and your labour will not be in vain " He that calleth on the name of the Lord, shall be saved." Where would be the benefit of such great and overflowing promises in the sacred Scriptures, unless God designed to keep them ? and so general has He made them, that no one can possibly be in doubt whether the promise is addressed to himself. Nay, if you only desire to have the knowledge of the faith, you will be certain to acquire it by this very act ; for this power cannot be found in our own most depraved nature, but it is the work of the Holy Spirit who cannot receive a refusal from God. Wherefore I am inclined to hope that God hath given you your present impulse, which if you follow, as above-mentioned, you will hence- forth enjoy tranquillity of mind. HER WRITINGS. 365 PHI. Why do you think of going away? remain yet a little while. THE. My affairs require my presence at home ; for when the mistress of a family is absent, those she leaves behind more commonly do wrong than right. I will visit you again in a few days. PHI. You will give me great pleasure. 366 OLYMPIA MORATA. Poetical Epistle from Hippolita Taurella, oj Mantua, to her husband Balthazar Castig- lione, Public Orator to Pope Leo the Tenth* FROM her, who, nobly born, would pleas'd aspire To win the nobler honours of the lyre, But, ah ! in vain ! this rude, unskilful lay To thee, my Castiglione, wends its way ! In Rome, thy dear lov'd Rome, so often named Delight of Gods and men (now doubly famed Beneath Great Leo's mild pacific reign) Thee troops of friends, and countless joys detain. There may the ever-ravished eye behold The treasured wonders of the days of old, And from their sculptured trophies proudly trace The giant fame of Rome's heroic race ; Thence range entranced o'er many a marble fane, Whose gilded roofs proud porticoes sustain, * It having been matter of regret that the beauties of the few remaining Greek and Latin poems of Olympia Morata depend too much on their classic felicity of diction to bear translation, an exception has gladly been made of the follow- ing lines, generally ascribed by contemporaries to her elegant pen, and in which the reader will easily recognize the same beautiful touches of conjugal affection, so conspicuous in her own correspondence, though here identified with the situation and circumstances of another. HER WRITINGS. 367 Rising a newer, brighter age to grace. Thence turn refresh'd to Nature's changeless face, Fresh founts, green fields, and all the garden's pride, Whose beauties deck old Tiber's verdant side. 'Mid these, how blest to join the festal throng (Forgetting cares of state; with harp and song, And sportive tale to while the summer's day, And laugh the sultry noontide heats away ! Far other life, alas ! is mine ! and yet Farther be still each selfish cold regret That joy with thee should dwell ! Love will but say Light's self is hateful when thou art away. Vainly with gems my careless tresses twine, Or with Arabian perfumes softly shine ; Heedless I gaze upon the festive sports, When thronging myriads fill the glittering courts, Nor glows my bosom ev'n when full-arm'd knight Rushes to meet proud rivals in the fight ! No ! one delight, one treasur'd joy alone, ' Mid pangs of absence, is at least mine own ; Thy image traced by Raphael's master hand ;" Before it oft in short-liv'd joy I stand ; With thy mute self in mimic talk beguile The weary hours half think I see thee smile Read kindly meanings in the moveless eye See the dear lips half parted to reply ; And, all my cares forgetting, seem to trace Each lov'd expression in the unalter'd face. 368 OLYMPIA MORATA. One joy there is more sacred still to hear Our prattling babe pronounce that name, so dear, Of Father ! which so oft he loves to pour To one who, as she listens, loves him more. Thus cheer'd, days glide in thy deserted home, But still when comes some happier guest from Rome, How do I ask (while yet reply I fear) If all indeed be well with one so dear 1 How do I tremble, as I hear him tell Of lawless crowds still ready to rebel ; Of blood that stains the Forum oft by day, Of frequent murders on the midnight way ; Of hostile cries, when rival factions meet, And with their quarrels vex the troubled street ! Oh ! from these perils fain I'd woo thee home, And, deadlier far to love from maids of Rome, Treach'rous as fair, and skill'd with many a wile, The short-liv'd pangs of absence to beguile. Time was when on thy lips th' unbidden vow Fondly arose (to mem'ry precious now). Thy heart should still be mine ! Then bliss be thine, My Castiglione ! nor let Love repine E'en at thy loss. Yet why, oh why thus chang'd ? Love will enquire why thus from her estrang'd, Thy earliest, fondest choice 1 What horrid spell Hangs o'er the form of her once lov'd so well ? Are holiest vows abjur'd, and ties that bind Indissolubly scatter'd to the wind ? And must I live in bitterness to learn That from Hippolita's loath'd name you turn 1 HER WRITINGS. 369 By Fate and Heav'n, for ever join'd in heart, Fate's self is powerless now to bid us part ! Dost think to mock by flight her stem decree, And from thy country fly, to fly from me ? Heedless of filial ties by duty wove, Regardless of a parent's mightier love 1 But hence ! presumptuous idle chidings, cease ! Ev'n now, blest halcyon messengers of peace, Thy precious lines, with truth's own language fraught, Rebuke to silence each injurious thought ; Thou too, with hope deferred, hast learned to pine, And pleas'd, for home would 'st gold and fame resign, Would but the mighty Pontiff grant release And send thee to thy household gods in peace ! Blest words ! reviving to my lonely bower, As to a drooping plant the summer shower ! Should even a doubt intrude, I'd bid it fly, And glory in my fond credulity ! I'll trust thy words, because each welcome sound Its faithful echo in my breast hath found ; Were they ev'n false, my stedfast truth shall shame All who would dare my confidence to blame. Not iron thy heart, nor was thy childhood's food From savage bears deriv'd in Alpine wood. Not thine the fault 'tis duty bids thee stay With him whom princes rev'rently obey. Yet clement is he called as great and prone To make a suppliant's sorrows all his own : B B 370 OLYMPIA MORATA. Seek then his presence, at his footstool bend, With thine own pray'r a wife's and infant's blend : Nor rise, till licens'd Mantua's walls to see, Or joyful to Rome's precincts summon me ! Tell him, that far from thee, like hapless boat, Her pilot gone, on stormy seas I float Of husband, father, all, in thee bereft, With nought, alas ! to cheer existence, left ; For life is life alone, when thou art nigh, And at thy side methinks 'twere joy to die. Go, be a suppliant thus the Pontiff mild Will, pleased, restore thee to thy wife and child. Then quickly speed, despising dull delay, Mounted on swiftest steeds, devour the way. Be mine with festal garlands decked, to wait Its welcome master at that mansion's gate, Whose self shall smile to see its threshhold prest, While vows to heaven my gratitude attest ! HER WRITINGS. 371 A Sermon by Bernardino Ochino* translated from Italian into Latin by Celius Secundus Curio. What it is to be justified by Christ, and what is the method of Justification. SINCE justification, which comes to us by Christ, is chiefly necessary for a Christian, and is the fountain of all gifts, virtues, and benefits ; so it ought to hold the chief place in our discourse. First, then, it is to be examined what that is which we call being "justified," or made just by Christ that we may be able to give thanks to God the Father, and to his Son Christ our Lord, for so great a gift. Now God does not justify or absolve a sinner, or pronounce him a just person (for that is the meaning of the term to justify) as a tyrant does, who, on hearing an accusation against a very wicked person, may (should he be under his * This sermon, admirable in itself, and, considering the time when it was written, almost inspired, may derive addi- tional interest to the reader, from the writer having been from 1547 to 1554 an eminent preacher in London. B B 2 372 OLYMPIA MORATA. protection, or the head of a powerful faction) de- fend or excuse, or even declare him innocent, although one of the worst of men. This sort of justification is quite fallacious, and equally im- pious and tyrannical. But this is not the way that God justifies the ungodly; for, as David says, " God is just and his judgment is righteous." Wherefore he doth not, like the tyrant, regard us with favour when we sin, nor consider us as just while we continue in our sins, far less (like him) applaud and protect sinners. But neither does God even justify any one after the manner of a good earthly monarch ; for it is the duty of such a prince, when an innocent per- son is brought to trial, to vindicate him from calumny, to defend his innocence, to pronounce him just, and absolve him openly, if he deserves it. Now we cannot be justified and absolved in this way, because we are not innocent, but sinners by nature. Nevertheless there are some, who, ignorant of the extent of their offences, claim a remission of punishment solely on the ground of apparent penitence for them ; while others neither desire nor expect pardon from God, but boldly assert their title to exemption from chastisement, and hold themselves as already just. HER WRITINGS. 373 This, however, is not the way in which God justifies a sinner; not, indeed, because any thing is impossible with Him, but because it hath ap- peared unto Him that no one could be pardoned without an atonement, as will be seen in a farther part of the discourse. Now for this method of justification we can be indebted to no man, for there is nothing in any man that can give satis- faction to God for even the smallest transgression against Him. Nay, no one can deserve even the most trifling mark of the mercy of God, as Jacob says to Him in Genesis "I am not worthy of the least of thy mercies." And, as St. Ambrose says, the redemption by the blood of Christ would be of no value, and the prerogative of the mercy of God would be less than the works of men, if justification, which is of grace, were to be awarded to preceding merit ; so that it should not be the gift of the giver, but the reward of him who has laboured. And thus St. Paul exclaims "If righteousness come by the law, then hath Christ died in vain !" Nor can it be urged that we are justified partly by our own and partly by the satisfaction of Christ ; for thus we might glory in ourselv es which is decidedly contrary to the doctrine of 374 OLYMPIA MORATA. St. Paul, who says, " If any one will glory, let him glory in the Lord ;" and in many places of the Scripture we are taught that all glory and honour are to be ascribed to God alone. By faith only, then, can men be justified, and not by their own merits ; their works are to be accounted of no consideration. For I say dis- tinctly, that if, even in the smallest degree, justifi- cation depended on ourselves, the promises of God and his Gospel would not be firm and sure, as Paul witnesses writing to the Romans 4th and 9th. For as both the prophet Haggai and Apostle Paul have written, all things are impure which the impure contrive or perform ; and as all are impure who are not justified by God, no work of theirs can please or satisfy Him. It is to set this in a proper light that Isaiah compares all our righte- ousness to " filthy rags," and St. Augustine con- firms that the merits of all men perished in Adam's first sin, by which we are all dead and void of righteousness ; for in " Adam all died, but in Christ alone shall all be made alive." Now, then, let us consider how it is possible that a man by his own exertions can make atone- ment for this great sinfulness. Is it not as if a dead man should attempt to resuscitate himself. HER WRITINGS. 375 and call himself back into life ? Wherefore Christ by no means said to the chief of the Synagogue, " Do thou perform thy part of the atonement, and I will fill up what is wanting," but he said unto him " Only believe." St. Paul, in his epistles to the Romans and Galatians, proves that no man can be justified either by the law, or by moral virtues, or J>y any human righteousness ; but rather that human righteousness, through the Jews, crucified Christ, through Pilate condemned him, and through Paul himself variously afflicted and dis- tressed Christ, in his members ; and how can we ascribe to this righteousness the power of justify- ing and blessing mankind ? For, first, in the opinion of St. Paul, law increases sin, and does not take it away ; it condemns, and does not par- don ; it kills, and does not revive. Secondly, the Pharisee boasted that he was justified, not by himself alone, but partly by his own exertions and partly through divine favour ; since to that effect he gave God thanks. But because he gave not distinctly to God the whole praise, nor con- fessed his own ignominy, as the publican did, he was not justified. Remember the parable of the shepherd in the Gospel, who, having left the ninety and nine sheep, (which signify those who 376 OLYMPIA MORATA. wish to justify themselves) sought out and pre- served the one who had strayed ; by which is meant, those who, acknowledging their sins, trust for justification and preservation only to the Divine goodness. There is a law, or rather custom, in certain cities and districts, that in the last week of Lent, which they call the great or Holy Week, a certain number of malefactors and prisoners are liberated, without any punishment, fine, or restitution on their own part, but solely from the mercy of their sovereign. Now though, in mentioning this cus- tom, while 1 praise the clemency I blame the superstition which has given rise to it; yet it very appropriately represents to us the goodness of God. For even as these criminals are freed with- out any exertion, or attempt on their part, and not only undeserving of the kindness, but worthy of severe punishment ; so we are preserved by the mercy of God, through the mediation of Christ. Do you wish to know how this is brought about ? Look to the thief who was affixed to the accursed tree along with Christ ; and tell me, I pray you, what good did he ever do, that he should hear from Christ these words, "This day shall thou be with me in paradise !" You say, perhaps, " he HER WRITING. 377 suffered stripes, tortures, and the cross." I an- swer, " he deserved all these on account of his crimes, and not these only, but greater, even eternal death." For though by these sufferings he might atone the breach of human laws, were he to die a thousand times he could not give satisfaction to divine justice. And if you should say that the thief was saved by a miracle, or by some singular privilege ; I will tell you that it is by an equal mi- racle, and by the singular mercy of God, that any will be saved ; and if they are saved, as all men are of the same nature , it must be through grace. For by nature we are all equally liable to eternal damnation, and, as Paul says, " to the wrath of the Son." But God, who is rich in mercy, " before the cre- ation of the world, elected whom he chose to be isaved in Christ; and those whom he elected, he also called, and whom he called he also justified and glorified." These words are not mine, but those of the Apostle Paul, the teacher of the Gentiles. So our justification, salvation, and blessedness have their sole foundation in Christ not partly in Christ, and partly in ourselves. Whence Paul teaches the Corinthians, that " no man can lay other foundation than that which is 378 OLYMPIA MORATA. laid viz. Christ Jesus ;" and those who ground their salvation on any other thing, are foolish, and ignorant of divine truths, and resemble those who build not their house upon a solid rock but upon the quick-sands, which the force of the winds and waves will destroy as wisdom and divine truth teacheth us. The Galatians, deceived by false teachers, as- serted their justification, partly by the works of the law, and partly through Christ which opi- nion Paul could not endure ; he reproves it as a most dangerous doctrine, because it takes away from the glory of Christ. For by whatever is ascribed to the works of men, even the most holy, in the work of justification, so much is taken away from the Divine mercy, and so much is detracted from the merits of Christ, and given to the merits of men . Wherefore no man can say that he is thus justified or that he can, either in whole or in part, give satisfaction to God. Others adopt this erroneous opinion, viz. that the works which precede justification, even though they may not be good in themselves, yet please God, through Christ, and are accounted by Him as meritorious ; from whence they infer that they are justified through Christ, without whom these HER WHITINGS. 379 works would be vain and of no effect. To these, I answer, that these works are decidedly sinful. Why so? First, because a bad tree cannot bring forth good fruits, and secondly, " without faith, (or an apprehension of the divine goodness through Christ), no man can please God ;" for Paul, in the third chapter of Philippians, counted all the most important works of legal righteousness as " loss" or " dung" that he " might win Christ ;" and, writing to Timothy (2nd epistle, 1st chap- ter), he teaches that we are saved and called, " not according to our own works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which is given unto us in Christ before the world began;" which sentence is held as being sharp and keen by St. Augustine, in his celebrated works. Who therefore will say that sin shall please a most just God, and that these will be accounted through Christ as being meritorious ; thus making sin the atonement of sin ? Christ died for our sins, not that he should approve of them, but con- demn them, and teach us that nothing could give him greater displeasure. And though " all things," it is said, " work for good to those who diligently seek God," how do they seek who have not known God, and who are not born in the faith, and begot- 380 OLYMPIA MORATA. ten anew ; who are not yet enlightened, and who havenot yet been translated from the power of dark- ness into the kingdom of the beloved and gracious Son of God ? Besides, that passage of St. Paul is to be understood as referring not to works, but to afflictions and the cross, as is shewn by the se- quence and order of the discourse. That were in- deed a wonderful justice of God, which should not only forbear to condemn sins, but even count them as virtues, and bestow on them rewards ! But far be such impious and absurd opinions from the mind and from the mouths of Christians. Lastly Some may imagine that we are thus justified by Christ, as if by an advocate, a pleader, a defender, or an intercessor ; because he requests for us from God the Father, the remission of our sins. This truly we will not deny ; but those who thus speak, though they say all, yet say no- thing for they omit the most important, the most divine and most necessary things which have been given to us through Christ. For, first, Christ transferred our sins to himself, and desired them to be ascribed to Him, from his great kind- ness, and with the consent and by the command of his Father; which Isaiah, the beloved prophet of God, long ago predicted. Secondly, he not only HER WRITINGS. 381 accepted them, as if he himself had committed all these sins (who was free from the shadow of blame) but desired to suffer the most agonizing death, by which he might satisfy divine justice. Nor was he content with the sacrifice. He gave to us his innocence, his justice, his holiness, his wisdom and what was greater than all his spirit, his soul, his breath; by which means, animated not by our own, but by the ' Spirit of Christ,' the Son of God, and as if it were born anew aye, truly, born again ! we are entitled to call God our Father ; before whom we may stand boldly, as if we were uncontaminated by even the shadow of sin. For, " He who spared not his own Son, but gave him for us all, will he not with him also freely give us all things?" Now, therefore, we are just and innocent, not from our own justice and innocence, but we are free from sins because Christ has made them his own, and delivered us by his death ; and also it is by the justice of Christ, and the purity which he hath given and transferred to us so freely, that we are able to appear rich and lovely before God. But these gifts, these virtues, these immor- 382 OLYMPIA MORATA. tal and heavenly treasures, depend upon one faith, and one certain persuasion (which is only to be received from God); and, in proportion to the extent of our faith, all these will be given to us. For this faith is the measure of all the rest of the gifts. This, then, is that righteousness of a Christian, or justification ; this is what we said it was, to be justified by Christ. Of which, whosoever attains it (and all who trust truly in Christ will at- tain it) may say with St. Paul, " I am crucified with Christ, yet I live ; but it is not I that live, but Christ that liveth in me." And why should I detain you longer ? Whoever is justified in this manner, may stand at the tribunal of divine jus- tice with that boldness, and that security with which Christ himself could stand ; for the state and condition of the head and the members are the same. Who will dare to accuse or condemn the Elect of God? God himself justifying, and Christ being the intercessor ? for we are clothed with Christ, and with his ornaments. Wherefore, as Jacob was received by his father instead of Esau, from wearing the garments of his brother, so our Father will acknowledge us as sons through HER WRITINGS. 383 the righteousness and holiness of Christ, and give us an inheritance in his everlasting kingdom. To God, and his only begotten Son, Jesus Christ, be all glory and honour for ever. Amen. APPENDIX. APPENDIX. ANCIENT PSALMS, PUBLISHED IN 1543. x THE 135th PSALM. Pseaume d' 'Actions de Graces. - ^ ^ - Q . g g a *>^ S S 3 R 3 e^- Chan - tez de Dieu le re nom, /-\ .-i ,. i ^^ *Ji^* h^ ^ o e O i Jrbc g i g d s O Vous ser - vi - teurs du Seig- If^-^ -_ _ f t-J uC~* [j ty\:/ Q 4 S , 75~t ' i J'kp I I -, ^ -fr^-er c^ ' S d H S ^ i"-4l- o - -o- neur. Ve - nez pour lui faire hon - near, !i ' 1 T 1 i 1 i 3, (* <=> er <-'L i ?^ ii y APPENDIX. i 1 55 - 5? 1 B ) i -S i s o Vous qui a - vez eu co don m i 1 1 i TJ \P o U 1 * X '- D'etre ha bit - ans o g .in mi 1 8 lieu Des Hk o! 2 i f)iC 1 F^- I o :S: par - via de Dieu. DA CAPO. Car 1'KtiTnrl sais-je bien, Est si grand que lea Dieux , Auprcs de Lui ne sont rien ; Qai fait en terre ct en cieux, Voire us goufl'res de la mcr Ce qu'il lin pl.<(t consommcr. APPENDIX. THE 118th PSALM. Pseaume d' Action de Graces, et de Prophitie. 9 e ^ Jf f c ^^ cn O- o 8 -nr*\- ' r- , '5 --0 i 8 o X c 2 ,-] < q c- J O Ren - dez a -(- ~l ' Dieu lou - ange et glo - ire, _. o r c* tJ'f* 2 ^ 2 C; O i i i -- - -rr-8 g e o Car W k^ 1 il est 1 be - a ni at et cle ment; '""k.* Q eJ*t^i r " ^ u QJ ^ ? Qui plus est sa bon - te no - toi Q . o t Dare per - pe - tu - elle - ment. Qu' Is APPENDIX. 1 rf ^ o " O i i 'i I ?fj_ 1 o : J|_34__^2 O ' ra-el or - es se re cor . de, ^ ' C f J I ^r^ c IV* ' ^>C? "^ ,. ^ , IL J -_ i Bz3 _ ""' <~ O ^^ o E \ V f ( ^ f~i g >C 5 y ^5 ^3 ^ _X _~t i S ^^ - -g- -1 ^- -] ^ De chan - ter so - lea -e- iH i le - ment, I? I q 1 ^ - c> Q o , - - - i o t. C i B jf} - - R W ^ ^ ~| ' r- ^T- Que sa gran -de mi - se - ri > cor de, a j-C ^J ^> I - 1 o* ^ _ ., . r?^- v c S -, .. & -:,<-. -:r - i Dure peY - ] xj - tu - t Hi- ment. DA CAPO. t)*r - L .-^ F in 1 WORKS RECENTLY PUBI.ISHFD BY SMITH, ELDER AND CO., CORNHILL. In a few days will be published, in foolscap 8vo. THE STOIC ; Or, Memoirs of Eurysthenes the Athenian. By J. K. Stanford. " Thi> rlrKKiu little volume it written in the purest language, and iti interesting contents exemplify, in * highly pleasing manner, the beauties and advantage* of Christianity over the many false systems of Religion which prevailed in the world during the times of the early Christum." THE RECTORY OF VALEHEAD, By the Rev. R. W. EVANS, M. A. The Sixth Edition, with Additions, and an Illustrative Plate. Price 6s. neatly bound in Cloth ; or 9s. elegantly bound in Morocco. " Universally and cordially do we recommend this delightful volame. Impressed with the genuine spirit of Christianity ; a diary, as it were, of the feelings, hopes, and sorrows, of family, it comes home to all, either in sympathy or example, ft is a beautiful picture of a religious household, influencing to excellence all within its sphere. We believe no person could read this work, and not be the better for its pious and touching lessons. It is a page taken from the book of life, and eloquent with all the instruction of an excellent Kttern : it is a commentary on the affectionate warning, ' Remember thy Creator in the jrs of thy youth.' M'e have not for some time, seen work we could so deservedly praise, or so conscientiously recommend." -Literary Gatette. Just completed, the Fourth Edition, with considerable additions, and a new Frontispiece, in 1 vol. f cap 8vo. price 7s. cloth extra, and 105. ele- gantly bound in morocco, THE RECORDS OF A GOOD MAN'S LIFE. By the Rev. C. B. Tayler. " An elegantly written and entertaining; work, in which a spirit of true piety breathes through every page ; and whilst the innocent recreation of the reader is amply cunnlted, his motives to virtue and morality receive an additional stimulus." Monthly Ktrirw. In ont vol.fcap Qvo. illustrated, price 6s. cloth, and 9s. morocco extra. MONTAGUE; or, IS THIS RELIGION? By the Rev. C. B. Tayler, M.A. A NEW AND IMPROVED EDITION. " To Christian parents we recommend the work, as admirably adapted In remind them o their important dntiri, and their awful responsibility ; and to our young readers, as afford- ing them much excellent advice and example, *nd displaying in the most lively colours tb high rewards of filial obedience." Cftrwrin Monitor. Works Published by Smith Elder Sf Co. A FIRESIDE BOOK; Or, The Account of a Christmas spent at Old Court. By the Rev C. B. Tayler. Second Edition, foolscap 8vo., price Os. cloth, and 9s. morocco extra. "This little volume is as a row of pearls strung upon a thread of gold. Jt has an ele- gant simplicity pervading it which is very pleasing, and a sterling value in its pure Christian morality, that gives it a still higher claim to praise." Gentleman's Magazine. "If elegant language and interesting narratives can recommend these pages, they will b universal favourites." Literary Gazette. " It is altogether one of the most charming books the season has produced." Literary Chronic!. Just published, beautifully illustrated, the Second Edition, price 7s. 6d. clot i: extra, or 10s. 6d. elegantly bound in Morocco, PICTURES OF PRIVATE LIFE, BY SARAH STICivNEY. " Sarah Stickney is an honour to her sex, and an ornament to literature. We woul'l plac her volume in an exquisite small library, sacred to sabbath feelings and the heart's bet, moods, when love and charity and hope combine to throw over the mind that soft and tranqui ' iilow only to be compared to the later glories of the day."- -Spectator. A NEW SERIES of PICTURES OF A'RIVATE LIFE, By the same Author, and Illustrated by H. Ho .vard, R. A., is nearly read} for publication. Just published, in Post 8vo. price 8s. cloth extra. THE CHRISTIAN'S MANUAL; Or, THE BIBLE ITS OWN INTERPRETER; being a Guide to the Propp; Study and Elucidation of the Holy Scriptures, by a new and correctet. arrangement of all those corresponding passages, dispersed throughout the Bible, which relate to the most important subjects, classed under appropriate heads, and in alphabetical order. Designed to set forth, in the pure Ian guage of Scripture, the Rule of Faith and Practice, 'and to afford assistance to Family and Private devotion. " Nothing can be more' pure in the intention or more convenient in the form than tlii useful volume." Literary Gazette. " It is deserving the attention of religious Teachers, and of all who have a taste or clinic. to study the Scriptures usefully." Sunday Times. " The plan is most excellent, and deserving high praise."--- Spiritual Magazine. Just completed, in Foolscap Qvo. price 6s. cloth extra, or 9s. elegantly bound in morocco. Ojc 3Ltfe auti Crabels of THE APOSTLE PAUL. Illustrated by a Map. " This is one of the most interesting works w* ever read." Edinburgh Ecclesiastical Journal. " This is an extremely interesting and instructive volume one most likely to engage the youthful mind, and to be read with equal pleasure and profit. We can safely say that a boi.k of this description, more deserving of a wide popularity, has not lately been produced ; and we heartily wish it every success." Literary Gazette. University of California SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY 405 Hilgard Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1388 Return this material to the library from which it was borrowed. ta 111 (* i*jCifc'V) x