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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Coming of
the Friars, by Augustus Jessopp
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Title: The Coming of the FriarsAuthor: Augustus Jessopp
Release Date: October, 2004 [EBook #6625] [Yes,
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG
EBOOK THE COMING OF THE FRIARS ***
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks and
the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.THE COMING OF THE FRIARS
AND OTHER HISTORIC
ESSAYS
BY THE REV. AUGUSTUS JESSOPP, D.D.
Hon. Canon in Norwich Cathedral, Hon. Fellow of
Worcester College,
Oxford, and Hon. Fellow of St. John's College,
Cambridge
FOURTEENTH IMPRESSIONTO MY FRIEND AND SOMETIME
TUTOR,
FRANCIS WHALLEY HARPER,
CANON OF YORK,
I OFFER THIS VOLUME AS A TOKEN OF MY
GRATITUDE
[These Essays have appeared at various times in
"The Nineteenth Century," and are now printed with
some alterations, corrections, and additions.]CONTENTS.
I. THE COMING OF THE FRIARS
II. VILLAGE LIFE IN NORFOLK SIX HUNDRED
YEARS AGO
III. DAILY LIFE IN A MEDIEVAL MONASTERY
IV. THE BLACK DEATH IN EAST ANGLIA
V. THE BLACK DEATH IN EAST ANGLIA
(continued)
VI. THE BUILDING UP OF A UNIVERSITY
VII. THE PROPHET OF WALNUT-TREE YARDI.
THE COMING OF THE FRIARS.
Sweet St. Francis of Assisi, would that he were
here again!—Lord
Tennyson.
When King Richard of England, whom men call the
Lion-hearted, was wasting his time at Messina,
after his boisterous fashion, in the winter of 1190,
he heard of the fame of Abbot Joachim, and sent
for that renowned personage, that he might hear
from his own lips the words of prophecy and their
interpretation.
Around the personality of Joachim there has
gathered no small amount of mythus. He was, it
appears, the inventor of that mystical method of
Hermeneutics which has in our time received the
name of "the year-day theory," and which, though
now abandoned for the most part by sane men,
has still some devout and superstitious advocates
in the school of Dr. Cumming and kindred
visionaries.
Abbot Joachim proclaimed that a stupendous
catastrophe was at hand. Opening the Book of the
Revelation of St. John he read, pondered, and
interpreted. A divine illumination opened out to him
the dark things that were written in the sacredpages. The unenlightened could make nothing of "a
time, times, and half a time" [Footnote: Dan. xii. 7.]
; to them the terrors of the 1,260 days [Footnote:
Rev. xi .3.] were an insoluble enigma long since
given up as hopeless, whose answer would come
only at the Day of Judgment. Abbot Joachim
declared that the key to the mystery had been to
him revealed. What could "a time, times, and half a
time" mean, but three years and a half? What
could a year mean in the divine economy but the
lunar year of 360 days? for was not the moon the
symbol of the Church of God? What were those
1,260 days but the sum of the days of three years
and a half? Moreover, as it had been with the
prophet Ezekiel, to whom it was said, "I have
appointed thee a day for a year," so it must needs
be with other seers who saw the visions of God. To
them the "day" was not as our brief prosaic day—
to them too had been "appointed a day for a year."
The "time, times, and half a time" were the 1,260
days, and these were 1,260 years, and the
stupendous catastrophe, the battle of
Armageddon, the reign of Antichrist, the new
heavens and the new earth, the slaughter and the
resurrection of the two heavenly witnesses, were at
hand. Eleven hundred and ninety years had
passed away of those 1,260. "Hear, O heavens,
and give ear, O earth," said Joachim; "Antichrist is
already born, yea born in the city of Rome!"
Though King Richard, in the strange interview of
which contemporary historians have left us a
curious narrative, exhibited much more of the spirit
of the scoffer than of the convert, and evidentlyhad no faith in Abbott Joachim's theories and his
mission, it was otherwise with the world at large. At
the close of the twelfth century a very general
belief, the result of a true instinct, pervaded all
classes that European society was passing through
a tremendous crisis, that the dawn of a new era,
or, as they phrased it, "the end of all things" was at
hand.
The Abbot Joachim was only the spokesman of his
age who was lucky enough to get a hearing. He
spoke a language that was a jargon of rhapsody,
but he spoke vaguely of terrors, and perils, and
earthquakes, and thunderings, the day of wrath;
and because he spoke so darkly men listened all
the more eagerly, for there was a vague
anticipation of the breaking up of the great waters,
and that things that had been heretofore could not
continue as they were.
Verily when the thirteenth century opened, the
times were evil, and no hope seemed anywhere on
the horizon. The grasp of the infidel was tightened
upon the Holy City, and what little force there ever
had been among the rabble of Crusaders was
gone now; the truculent ruffianism that pretended
to be animated by the crusading spirit showed its
real character in the hideous atrocities for which
Simon de Montfort is answerable, and in the
unparalleled enormities of the sack of
Constantinople in 1204. For ten years (1198—
1208) through the length and breadth of Germany
there was ceaseless and sanguinary conflict. In the
great Italian towns party warfare, never hesitatingto resort to every kind of crime, had long been
chronic. The history of Sicily is one long record of
cruelty, tyranny, and wrong— committed, suffered,
or revenged. Over the whole continent of Europe
people seem to have had no homes; the merchant,
the student, the soldier, the ecclesiastic were
always on the move. Young men made no difficulty
in crossing the Alps to attend lectures at Bologna,
or crossing the Channel to or from Oxford and
Paris. The soldier or the scholar was equally a
free-lance, ready to take service whereever it
offered, and to settle wherever there was dread to
win or money to save. No one trusted in the
stability of anything. [Footnote: M. Jusserand's
beautiful book, "La Vie Nomade," was not
published till 1884, i.e., a year after this essay
appeared.]
To a thoughtful man watching the signs of the
times, it may well have seemed that the hope for
the future of civilization—the hope for any future,
whether of art, science, or religion-lay in the steady
growth of the towns. It might be that the barrier of
the Alps would always limit the influence of Italian
cities to Italy and the islands of the Mediterranean;
but for the great towns of what is now Belgium and
Germany what part might not be left for them to
play in the history of the world? In England the
towns were as yet insignificant communities
compared with such mighty aggregates of
population as were to be found in Bruges, Antwerp,
or Cologne; but even the English towns were
communities, and they were beginning to assert
themselves somewhat loudly while clinging to their