The Church
and the Empires
Historical Periods by
Henry William Wilberforce
Henry S. King & Co. London: 1874
———————
Memoir
of
Henry W. Wilberforce
{1} HENRY WILLIAM
WILBERFORCE, the subject of
this Memoir, was the youngest son of William Wilberforce, well known
as the friend of Pitt and Member of Parliament for Yorkshire, and
still more distinguished for his persevering and successful resistance
in Parliament to the Slave Trade and Slavery, and for his high
Christian character in a time of general religious declension.
He was born at Clapham on September 22, 1807.
When nine years old, he was entrusted to the care of the Reverend John
Sargent, the friend and biographer of Henry Martyn, and Rector of
Graffham, Sussex, one of whose daughters he eventually married. With
Mr. Sargent, who educated him with one of his own sons, he remained
till he was fifteen, when he was transferred to the Reverend F. R.
Spragge, who took pupils at Little Boundes, near Tunbridge Wells, and
had charge of him till the time came for his going to the University.
He was entered at Oriel College, Oxford, and came into residence in
Michaelmas Term, 1826. {2}
I well recollect my first sight of him, on his
presenting himself before the tutors of his college,—when the
lectures had to be arranged for the Term, and his place in them, as a
Freshman, determined. He was small and timid, shrinking from notice,
with a bright face and intelligent eyes. Partly from his name, partly
from his appearance, I was at once drawn towards him; and, as he
subsequently told me, he felt a corresponding desire to know me; and,
in a little time, though I was not formally his college tutor, and
only had relations with him as with other undergraduates in my lecture
room, we became very intimate. He read with me, as his private tutor,
during a portion of four long vacations—at Hampstead in 1827, at
Nuneham in 1828, at Horsepath in 1829, and in Oriel in 1830. In
Michaelmas Term, 1830, he went up for his B.A. examination, and was
placed by the examiners in the first class in classics, and in the
second in mathematics.
At Oxford he remained after taking his degree of
B.A. for several years; at least to the year 1833, when he gained the
Ellerton Theological Prize, and took his Master's degree. His chief
associates in his own college during his Oxford residence were,
besides his elder brother Robert, and the Reverend R. Hurrell Froude,
at that time Fellows and Tutors of Oriel, Mr. Frederic Rogers, now
Lord Blachford; Mr. S. F. Wood, brother to the present Lord Halifax;
Mr. George Ryder, son of the Bishop of Lichfield; Mr. Robert F.
Wilson, at present examining chaplain to the Bishop of Salisbury; Mr.
William Froude, F.R.S.; and Mr. Thomas Mozley, Rector of Plymptree,
Devon. I am {3} not able to name any of his friends outside of his
college besides the late Mr. John Rogers, and the present Archbishop
Manning, both of Balliol, and Mr., now Sir Thomas, Acland, of Christ
Church. He had a large acquaintance in the University, while an
undergraduate, in consequence of the interest he took in the
University Debating Society, called the Union. Of this Society he was
at one time President, and for several years he took a prominent part
in its debates. One speech, or rather act, of his, while he occupied
the Chair, made a sensation at the time, and remains on the minds of
some of his contemporaries even now. In the midst of a debate, a
member, I am told, entered under the influence of wine, and began an
address to the meeting so incoherent and noisy, and with so ludicrous
a mixture of sense and nonsense, as to throw the room into extreme
confusion. It seemed hopeless to restore order, when the President
rose, and looking round on the members, simply asked, 'Has the noble
Lord no friends here?' These words had their effect at once; friends
came forward, the offender was removed, and the debate proceeded.
In 1836, after he had left the University, he
gained the Deniers Theological Prize by an essay on 'Faith in the
Holy Trinity.'
In the same year he took a prominent part in the
proceedings at Oxford which followed upon Dr. Hampden's promotion to
the Regius Professorship of Divinity.
His talents were of a character to ensure
distinction, whether in a University or in a public career. He had a
{4} singularly quick apprehension, a clear head, a largeness and
sobriety of mind, a readiness in speech, and that sense of humour and
power of repartee which makes a man brilliant in conversation and
formidable to opponents. But he chose for himself another course. His
tastes and habits, his affectionateness, his tenderness of conscience,
his love of quiet and the country, his dislike of pomp and display, of
routine toil, and of tyrannous obligations, turned him towards a
domestic life and the pastoral charge. He liked to be master of his
own time and his own movements; and though never idle, whether in mind
or body, he had no wish to work under the lash. He used to tell me
that it was my doing that he took Orders instead of following the Law.
Perhaps it was; we are blind to the future, and are forced to decide,
whether for ourselves or for others, according to what seems best at
the time being. Certainly he had an oratorical talent so natural and
pleasant, so easy, forcible, and persuasive, as to open upon him the
prospect of rising to the foremost rank in his profession, had he been
a lawyer. On the other hand, the legal disabilities, to which his
Anglican Orders subjected him, became a great embarrassment to him
when he found himself a Catholic. However, it may reasonably be
doubted whether, humanly speaking, he would ever have been a Catholic
but for his clerical profession, which, in the studies and enquiries
to which it introduced him, served to place his mind and affections in
the direction of the Catholic Church. And anyhow, he made an excellent
parish minister, with a heart devoted to his Divine Master and to the
cure of souls; and his love for his work was {5} ennobled by the
prompt obedience with which he gave it up when His Master called upon
him for that great sacrifice.
He held successively three parochial cures.
First, immediately upon his most happy marriage, which took place on
July 24, 1834, he received from the Bishop of Winchester, Dr. Charles
Richard Sumner, the perpetual curacy of Bransgore, on the skirts of
the New Forest. Here he remained for seven years; then he left it, in
the summer of 1841, for the perpetual curacy of Walmer, near Deal, his
patron being Archbishop Howley. Lastly, in the autumn of 1843, he was
preferred by the Lord Chancellor, at the instance of the Prince
Consort, to the well-endowed living of East Farleigh, near Maidstone,
which some years previously had been held by his brother Robert.
I have heard various particulars of his
earnestness and unweariedness in the discharge of his parochial duties
from an intimate friend, who was his partner in them both at Bransgore
and Walmer. They are too minute and familiar to put into print; but
they are valuable, as coinciding with what I knew of him, and should
have expected from him myself. His parsonage itself, in its domestic
order, its frugality, its bountiful alms, and its atmosphere of
religious reverence and peace, was, as it ought to be, the mainspring
and centre of that influence which he exercised upon the people
committed to him. To them, and to their needs, temporal and spiritual,
he gave himself wholly. He had an almost overpowering sense of the
responsibilities which lay upon him as the pastor of a parish; and his
habits and ways, his words and deeds, his demeanour, his dress, and
his general self-neglect, all in one way or other spoke to my
informant of that simplicity of mind and {6} humility which I
recognised in him when he was a youth at Oxford.
In all his livings he introduced daily service
into his church; at Walmer he had, besides, an evening service for
soldiers in hospital; also he addressed himself to the spiritual needs
of that fine class of men, the seafaring population of Deal. His
activity showed itself in matters ecclesiastical, as well as pastoral.
There was no parsonage at Walmer; by an examination of the parish
books he was able to ascertain the old glebe which belonged to the
living, and he recovered it, together with a house which had been
built upon it, for future incumbents. He also took measures for
commencing a new church at Lower Walmer, which was built after he
left, and, small as were his means, he headed the subscription list
with a donation from himself. He had already, when at Bransgore, been
instrumental in providing a church for Burley, a neighbouring village;
and here too, he succeeded in making a munificent contribution to the
building. He had in 1836 gained the prize of two hundred guineas,
which had been offered to general competition for an essay on the
Parochial System; and he gave this large sum to the fund collected for
the new church. At East Farleigh he built a substantial school-house,
and here, too, not without taking a part of the cost of it on himself.
A zeal so energetic and vigilant is often met
with a jealous resistance on the part of those who are the subjects or
witnesses of it, when they belong to the higher or middle classes. At
Bransgore, a country district, he was able to act as he thought best,
and was rewarded simply {7} by the respect and love of his people.
Such a return also followed his pastoral activity both at Walmer and
East Farleigh; but in those places he at certain times had to
encounter much opposition in his work; and then it was found that,
gentle and unassuming as he was at first sight and in his ordinary
behaviour, and averse to all that was pretentious or overbearing, he
had the command of plain words and strong acts when the occasion
called for them; and could (as we all knew he could, who knew him at
an earlier date) with fearlessness, directness, and determination
speak his own mind and carry out his own views of duty.
It was his confidence, however, in his own
ecclesiastical position and claims which alone supported him on such
occasions, and the time came when that confidence was shaken. It is
not to be supposed that he was an uninterested spectator of the series
of events which occurred at Oxford from the year 1841 onwards; nor was
the action of his own mind wanting to bring home those events to
himself personally. He had ever accepted the teaching of the standard
Anglican divines, strictly confining himself in his conduct within the
rules and precedents of the Anglican Church; but at length he began to
have misgivings as to that Church's divine authority and mission,
and, as year passed after year, these misgivings increased. At length
they became practical difficulties in his course; and in the autumn of
1849 an accident was the occasion of their ripening into convictions.
His parish was visited, year by year, in the hop season by a large
influx of Irish from London. The gathering had just commenced in this
year, when suddenly there was a fearful outbreak of cholera among
these poor {8} people; many were struck down at their work, and lay
dead or at death's door in the gardens and barns round about. Being
Catholics they could not accept Mr. Wilberforce's services; and the
priest who promptly came over to their aid from Tunbridge Wells soon
found himself insufficient for the multitude of sick and dying.
Several Fathers of the London Oratory came to his assistance, and two
nuns of the Good Shepherd from Hammersmith. These, the inmates of the
parsonage, regardless of the peril, took into their own house, and
supplied to the extent of their power with whatever was needed by
their patients. Every act of charity done for our Lord's sake has
its reward from Him; and Mr. Wilberforce used to call to mind with
deep gratitude that on the day year on which he had received our
Lord's servants into his house, he and his, through our Lord's
mercy, were received into the everlasting home of the Catholic Church.
This event took place on September 15, 1850.
Viewed on its human side, Mr. Wilberforce's
conversion may be attributed, on the one hand, to the straightforward
logic of a clear mind; on the other, to his intimate profound
perception of the unseen world, and of his responsibilities in
relation to it. While he was resolute in pursuing his principles to
their legitimate issues, he was undaunted in facing those issues,
whatever they might be. Religion was to him not knowledge, so much as
obedience. The simple question was, as he felt it, not to rid himself
of the thousand difficulties speculative and practical, which hem in
and confuse our intellect here below, but what was the word and what
was the will of Him who gave him a work {9} to do on earth. If that
will was plain, it was nothing to the purpose, it was nothing to him,
that 'clouds and darkness' closed it in on every side. 'What
must I do to be saved?' that was the whole matter with him, as with
all serious minds. That there had been a Revelation given from above
to man, in order to our eternal salvation, was undeniable; the only
point was, what was it? what were its gifts, its promises, its
teaching? where were these to be found? how were they to be obtained?
His intellect made answer—the more clearly and distinctly the longer
he thought upon it—in the Church universally called Catholic, and
nowhere else. It, and it alone, carried with it the tokens and notes,
the continuity, succession, and claims, of that divine polity which
had been founded and formed by the Apostles in the beginning. This,
then, was the Fold of Christ, the Ark of Salvation, the Oracle of
Truth, and the Anglican communion was no part of it. To this Church he
was in consequence bound to betake himself without hesitation or
delay, as soon as he had in his intellect a distinct recognition of
it. This grave practical conclusion, which ought to be the motive
principle of every convert, is signified in the letter which on
resigning his living he addressed, with the respectful familiarity due
to a friend and relative, to John Bird Sumner, then Archbishop of
Canterbury, his diocesan. It ran as follows:—
'Your Grace will not be surprised to learn that
I feel myself compelled to request you to accept the resignation of
this living. I dare no longer officiate in the Church of England, and
feel my individual salvation at stake.
'In taking this step I feel so many heartstrings
breaking {10} that I dare not allow myself to think of the
consequences or the cost on earth, either to myself, or to those I
love. I have put my hand to the plough, and I must not look back. My
own strength is nothing, and I dare not tempt God by presuming He will
enable me to stand firm if I subject myself to any temptation which I
can avoid. I have, therefore, purposely tried not to think of the pain
which I must give to so many who are deservedly dear to me as my own
soul.
'There are considerations, which leave me no
room to doubt; first, what I should wish a stranger to do were he in
my place; secondly, what I should wish to have done were I upon my bed
of death; or, thirdly, were I at the judgment-seat of Christ.
'I have, perhaps, said more than I have any
right to express to your Grace; but I was going to say, that, among
many other bitter remembrances which I am forced to cast aside, the
thought of giving pain to yourself, after the many kindnesses which I
have received from you, has often forced itself into my mind.
'I can but thank you for your kindness; and yet
there is one thing else which I may, and (by God's help) I trust I
ever shall continue to do; I mean, to remember you at the Throne of
Grace: my prayer must ever be, that He, who has been pleased to call me,
so deeply unworthy of His grace, may extend the same favour to one so
much more meet for it as yourself.
'Believe me, &c., &c.' {11}
There was one among the many severe trials
involved in his change of religion, to which time brought no relief.
He had devoted himself, when he became an Anglican clergyman, to the
immediate service of God, and had willingly taken upon himself a
lifelong ministry; but, while the law of the land refused to regard
him, now that he was a Catholic, in any other light, on the other hand
in the eyes of Catholics he was a mere layman. He, as many others, in
the fulness and maturity of his powers, and with his best years before
him, was doomed for life to have no definite place or work in a
community which needed such as him so grievously, and to resign
himself to the prospect henceforth of running to waste. Henceforth he
must look to be a 'pilgrim and stranger' in his own land. He had
to give up an honourable post and well-requited services for the
almost certainty in time to come of a dull, listless inactivity, or of
fitful, precarious employments. However, he was not the man to resign
himself without a struggle to a lot as forlorn as it was unnatural. He
had counted the cost; his ordination might be invalid, but his
self-dedication was his own—hearty, deliberate, irreversible. After
a season of retirement and repose, such as became him after the great
crisis in his history, he put himself at the disposal of those who
seemed likely to make the most use of him. In the spring of 1852 he
accepted the office of secretary to the Catholic Defence Association,
then lately founded in Dublin, under the auspices, I believe, of the
present Cardinal Cullen, on occasion of that notorious 'Ecclesiastical Titles' Act, which has recently been repealed.
Though he remained in Ireland only two or three years in this
capacity, still he was able, on various occasions, even in that short
sojourn, greatly to edify the born Catholics, among whom he found
himself, {12} by the singleminded zeal and the devout spirit which he
displayed as a convert to their faith.
Indeed, his very presence preached, though he had
no ecclesiastical position; for it spoke of a man who, at the call of
Christ, had left his nets and fishing, and all his worldly
surroundings, to follow Him. As to instances in point, it is scarcely
to be expected that, at this distance of time, any record of them
should remain. One, however, by a happy accident, I am able to recall,
in the words of a good parish priest of County Clare, who, on hearing
of his death, thus wrote to one of Mr. Wilberforce's Sons: —
'The pecuniary aid I got from your esteemed
parents, and from other powerful friends through them, the
countenance, advice, and encouragement they gave me about twenty years
ago, when four proselytising schools were erected in my parish to
pervert my poor people, enabled me, next to God's grace, to succeed
in keeping the Faith unbroken and flourishing. We have now entire
religious peace. My parishioners all know as well as I do, the
benefits your father and mother conferred on the religion of this
parish. They sent me a valuable Remonstrance; and, every Festival
since, the people have Benediction of the Most Holy Sacrament; and,
please God, I will without delay have all my parishioners at a Requiem
Mass, offered up for the repose of the soul of their friend and
benefactor. The most of them will remember his kindness, and his
earnest impressive exhortations to hold fast by their old faith.'
Also, I myself remember a conversation he had
with me about one of his charitable acts in a distant part of {13}
Ireland where he had land. He gave a piece of ground for a presbytery,
and thereby was the means of gaining for the people a resident priest,
whereas hitherto only an occasional Mass was said upon the property.
But these are only accidental records of many
good works, forgotten except by Him who inspired them.
From 1854 to 1863 he was the proprietor and
editor of the 'Catholic Standard,' afterwards called the 'Weekly
Register.' In this, as in all his undertakings, he was actuated by
an earnest desire to promote the interests of religion, though at the
sacrifice of his own.
In December, 1859, he went with his family to
Rome for the winter, and was received with much affection at a private
audience by the Holy Father, who had known his brother Robert. On
going a second time to the Vatican, after an attack of Roman fever,
his Holiness, remarking the traces of illness upon his countenance,
gave him his blessing, specially for his recovery. That night the
usual access of fever did not take place, and he slept well; and this
improvement, which continued for some time, he always attributed to
the Apostolic blessing.
He visited Rome again in June, 1862, on occasion
of the Canonisations. During that time he sent home many interesting
letters, which were published in the 'Weekly Register,'
descriptive of the proceedings which accompanied the sacred solemnity.
After his retirement from the management of the 'Weekly Register' he was for the future free from the duties of
any formal occupation. Among the employments of these latter years has
been the writing of his articles in {14} the 'Dublin Review,' some
of which are to follow this Memoir. In 1871 he became sensible of a
serious diminution of strength; and, on his proceeding in October to
consult his medical friend, a voyage to Jamaica was proposed to him as
a means of his recovery. Trying as it was in itself at his age to go
so far from home, such advice was not without its recommendations to
him. It had been the dream of his life to see the tropics; and now in
this unexpected way that dream was to be fulfilled. He set out with a
strong hope that his health would receive real benefit both from the
voyage and from a climate so genial and so new to him. Yet his hope
was tempered by those dominant sentiments which, I believe, never for
an instant were absent from his mind. He wrote from Malvern to her who
had for so long a spell of years made him so bright a home, 'May God
keep His arm over you for good, and unite us hereafter in His kingdom!
Coming here, and feeling how much older I am, makes me feel "the
time is short." The generations of men are like "the leaves," as
the Greek poet says; but our Lord Jesus is the Resurrection and the
Life.'
His youngest daughter accompanied him to Jamaica,
where, though a stranger, he was received with the warmest
hospitality. In his own words, he was received like a brother by the
Chief Justice, Sir John Lucie Smith, on his first landing, and,
through the winter up in the hills, by Judge Ker. He was amazed and
enchanted by the beauty of the island, and for a time he really did
gain good by going thither. This improvement, however, did not last;
he returned home in July, 1872, to suffer a gradual but visible decay
all through the following winter; and, when {15} Easter came, eternity
was close upon him. He had ever lived in the presence of God; and I
suppose it was this that specially struck one of his Jamaica friends,
who has written, on the news of his death, 'I looked upon him as one
of the most holy of men.' Indeed, in these last months his very life
was prayer and meditation. No one did I ever know who more intimately
realised the awfulness of the dark future than he. His sole trust,
hope, and consolation lay in his clear, untroubled faith. All was dark
except the great truths of the Catholic religion; but though they did
not lighten the darkness, they bridged over for him the abyss. He
calmly spoke to me of the solemn, unimaginable wonders which he was
soon to see. Now he sees them. Each of us in his own turn will see
them soon. May we be as prepared to see them as he was!
With his wife and children round him, and taking
their part by turns at his bedside in a perpetual round of prayers, he
died, emphatically, in peace on Wednesday morning, April 23, aged 65.
He was buried on the 29th in the churchyard, close by his residence,
of the Dominican Fathers, who had so carefully attended him during his
long illness. Those kind Fathers had said Mass several times a week at
an altar in his own house through the winter, by leave obtained from
Dr. Clifford, Bishop of Clifton, for whose considerateness his family
feel deep gratitude. The two last Masses, when he was in his bed, he
heard from his own son of the order of St. Dominic, who also gave him
the Viaticum, on his second reception of it, on his last morning. He
had received extreme unction three days before; he died in the
Dominican habit. {16}
Mr. Wilberforce was not without great family
sorrows, from which the happiest homes have no immunity. Of his
children four died, in infancy or childhood, between the years 1841
and 1853; but this trial, acute as it was, has been the only trial of
his domestic life. To him, a good religious father, has been given the
supreme blessing of good children. May they ever recollect how great a
name they bear!
J. H. N.
July 14, 1873.
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