All the accounts remaining of St. Anthony agree in representing him to posterity as an example of learning, of piety, and of zeal. These qualities, possessed however in common with thousands of others, would have failed to make his name known to after times, if a legend had not established his fame as a Saint, and elevated him to the high station of protector and patron of fishermen all over the Christian world.

The legend may be best conveyed in the poetry of Dr. Darwin:

So when the Saint from Padua’s graceless land,

In silent anguish sought the barren strand,

High on the shatter’d beach sublime he stood,

Still’d with his waving arm the babbling flood;

“To man’s dull ear,” he cry’d, “I call in vain,

Hear me, ye scaly tenants of the main!”

Misshapen seals approach in circling flocks,

In dusky mail the tortoise climbs the rocks,