There have been two sorts of usurpers in our quarter of the world, Europe—robbers and forgers.
6. Bayle, although allowing the title of Great to Gregory, acknowledges at the same time that this turbulent man disgraced his heroism by his prophecies. He had the audacity to create an emperor, and in that he did well, as the emperor Henry IV. had made a pope. Henry deposed him, and he deposed Henry. So far there is nothing to which to object—both sides are equal. But Gregory took it into his head to turn prophet; he predicted the death of Henry IV. for the year 1080; but Henry IV. conquered, and the pretended emperor Rudolph was defeated and slain in Thuringia by the famous Godfrey of Bouillon, a man more truly great than all the other three. This proves, in my opinion, that Gregory had more enthusiasm than talent.
I subscribe with all my heart to the remark of Bayle, that "when a man undertakes to predict the future, he is provided against everything by a face of brass, and an inexhaustible magazine of equivocations." But your enemies deride your equivocations; they also have a face of brass like yourself; and they expose you as a knave, a braggart, and a fool.
7. Our great man ended his public career with witnessing the taking of Rome by assault, in the year 1083. He was besieged in the castle, since called St. Angelo, by the same emperor Henry IV., whom he had dared to dispossess, and died in misery and contempt at Salerno, under the protection of Robert Guiscard the Norman.
I ask pardon of modern Rome, but when I read the history of the Scipios, the Catos, the Pompeys, and the Cæsars, I find a difficulty in ranking with them a factious monk who was made a pope under the name of Gregory VII.
But our Gregory has obtained even a yet finer title; he has been made a saint, at least at Rome. It was the famous cardinal Coscia who effected this canonization under Pope Benedict XIII. Even an office or service of St. Gregory VII. was printed, in which it was said, that that saint "absolved the faithful from the allegiance which they had sworn to their emperor."
Many parliaments of the kingdom were desirous of having this legend burned by the executioner: but Bentivoglio, the nuncio—who kept one of the actresses at the opera, of the name of Constitution, as his mistress, and had by her a daughter called la Legende; a man otherwise extremely amiable, and a most interesting companion—procured from the ministry a mitigation of the threatened storm; and, after passing sentence of condemnation on the legend of St. Gregory, the hostile party were contented to suppress it and to laugh at it.
[LIST OF PLATES—VOL. V]
[FANATICISM.]
[FANCY.]
[FASTI.]
[FATHERS—MOTHERS—CHILDREN.]
[FAVOR.]
[FAVORITE.]
[FEASTS.]
[FERRARA.]
[FEVER.]
[FICTION.]
[FIERTÉ.]
[FIGURE.]
[FIGURED—FIGURATIVE.]
[FIGURE IN THEOLOGY.]
[FINAL CAUSES.]
[FINESSE, FINENESS, ETC.]
[FIRE.]
[FIRMNESS.]
[FLATTERY.]
[FORCE (PHYSICAL).]
[FORCE—STRENGTH.]
[FRANCHISE.]
[FRANCIS XAVIER.]
[FRANKS—FRANCE—FRENCH]
[FRAUD.]
[FREE-WILL.]
[FRENCH LANGUAGE.]
[FRIENDSHIP.]
[FRIVOLITY.]
[GALLANT.]
[GARGANTUA.]
[GAZETTE.]
[GENEALOGY.]
[GENESIS.]
[GENII.]
[GENIUS.]
[GEOGRAPHY.]
[GLORY—GLORIOUS.]
[GOAT—SORCERY.]
[GOD—GODS.]
[GOOD—THE SOVEREIGN GOOD, A CHIMERA.]
[GOOD.]
[GOSPEL.]
[GOVERNMENT.]
[GOURD OR CALABASH.]
[GRACE.]
[GRACE (OF).]
[GRAVE—GRAVITY.]
[GREAT—GREATNESS.]
[GREEK.]
[GUARANTEE.]
[GREGORY VII.]