Donahoe's Magazine, Volume 15, No. 1, January 1886
Transcriber's note: Minor typos have been corrected and footnotes have been moved to the end of the chapters. This issue only contains January, 1886.
The future of the Irish race in this country, will depend largely upon their capability of assuming an independent attitude in American politics. —Right Rev. Doctor Ireland, St. Paul, Minn.
To all the Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops and Bishops of the Catholic World, in the Grace and Communion of the Apostolic See,
Venerable Brethren, Health and Apostolic Benediction.
The work of a merciful God, the Church looks essentially, and from the very nature of her being, to the salvation of souls and the winning for them of happiness in heaven, nevertheless, she also secures even in this world, advantages so many and so great that she could not do more, even if she had been founded primarily and specially to secure prosperity in this life which is worked out upon earth. In truth, wherever the Church has set her foot she has at once changed the aspect of affairs, colored the manners of the people as with new virtues and a refinement unknown before—as many people as have accepted this have been distinguished for their gentleness, their justice, and the glory of their deeds. But the accusation is an old one, and not of recent date, that the Church is incompatible with the welfare of the commonwealth, and incapable of contributing to those things, whether useful or ornamental, which, naturally and of its own will, every rightly-constituted State eagerly strives for. We know that on this ground, in the very beginnings of the Church, the Christians, from the same perversity of view, were persecuted and constantly held up to hatred and contempt, so that they were styled the enemies of the Empire. And at that time it was generally popular to attribute to Christianity the responsibility for the evils beneath which the State was beaten down, when in reality, God, the avenger of crimes, was requiring a just punishment from the guilty. The wickedness of this calumny, not without cause, fired the genius and sharpened the pen of Augustine, who, especially in his Civitate Dei , set forth so clearly the efficacy of Christian wisdom, and the way in which it is bound up with well-being of States, that he seems not only to have pleaded the cause of the Christians of his own time, but to have triumphantly refuted these false charges for all time. But this unhappy inclination to complaints and false accusations was not laid to rest, and many have thought well to seek a system of civil life elsewhere than in the doctrines which the Church approves. And now in these latter times a new law, as they call it, has begun to prevail, which they describe as the outcome of a world now fully developed, and born of a growing liberty. But although many hazardous schemes have been propounded by many, it is clear that never has any better method been found for establishing and ruling the State than that which is the natural result of the teaching of the Gospel. We deem it, therefore, of the greatest moment, and especially suitable to our Apostolic function, to compare with Christian doctrine the new opinions concerning the State, by which method we trust that, truth being thus presented, the causes of error and doubt will be removed, so that each may easily see by those supreme commandments for living, what things he ought to follow, and whom he ought to obey.
Various
DONAHOE'S MAGAZINE
TALES, BIOGRAPHY, EPISODES IN IRISH AND AMERICAN HISTORY, POETRY, MISCELLANY, ETC.
VOL. XV.
January, 1886, to July, 1886.
Contents.
Donahoe's Magazine.
Encyclical Letter
OF OUR MOST HOLY LORD LEO XIII., BY DIVINE PROVIDENCE POPE,
LEO PP XIII.
His Eminence John Cardinal McCloskey.
ARCHBISHOP OF NEW YORK, CARDINAL PRIEST OF THE TITLE OF SANCTA MARIA SUPRA MINERVAM.
The Pope and the Mikado.
Order of the Buried Alive.
Harvard College and the Catholic Theory of Education.
An Affecting Incident at Sea.
Sing, Sing for Christmas.
Dead Man's Island.
THE STORY OF AN IRISH COUNTRY TOWN.
CHAPTER XVII.
CHAPTER XVIII.
Alone.
A Midnight Mass.
From the French of Abel d'Avrecourt, by Th. Xr. K.
The Hero of Lepanto.
Part II.
FOOTNOTES:
The Church and Progress.
FOOTNOTES:
Honor to the Germans.
Vindication.
From the German of Reinick.
Tracadie and the Trappists.
Gladstone at Emmet's Grave.
HOW THE UNMARKED TOMBSTONE OF THE MARTYR LOOKED.
Gerald Griffin.
FOOTNOTES:
Rev. Father Fulton, S. J.,
Private Judgment a Failure.
Priests and People Mourning.
The Great and Gifted Redemptorist Father, Rev. John O'Brien, Deceased—Beautiful and Appropriate Tributes to his Memory.
SLEEP ON.
In Memory of Father John O'Brien, C. SS. R.
Crown and Crescent.
Four Thousand Years.
Abolishing Barmaids.
Christianity in China.
"Faro's Daughters."
Juvenile Department.
A CHILD'S DAY.
THE CHRISTMAS TURKEY.
THE CHRISTMAS STOCKING.
THE CHRISTMAS CRIB.
CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR THE BOYS.
ROBIN REDBREAST.
FOOLISH GIRLS.
LITTLE QUEEN PET AND HER KINGDOM.
Useful Knowledge
The Humorist
DONAHOE'S MAGAZINE.
BOSTON, JANUARY, 1886.
Notes on Current Topics.
"IT IS FASHIONABLE TO BE IRISH, NOW."
Hon. Hugh O'Brien's Magnificent Record as Mayor of Boston.
Mr. P. J. Maguire for Alderman.
Death of the Vice-President.
Personal.
Notices of Recent Publications.
MISCELLANEOUS.
MUSIC.
Obituary.
"After life's fitful fever they sleep well."
BISHOP.
CLERGYMEN.
SISTER.
LAY PEOPLE.